Object data
oil on canvas
support: height 155.4 cm × width 172 cm × thickness 3.5 cm
outersize: depth 7.5 cm (support incl. SK-L-2097)
Salomon Koninck
1644
oil on canvas
support: height 155.4 cm × width 172 cm × thickness 3.5 cm
outersize: depth 7.5 cm (support incl. SK-L-2097)
Support The support consists of two pieces of plain-weave canvas with a vertical seam at approx. 58 cm from the right edge, and has been starch-paste lined. The tacking edges have been preserved on the left and right, the ones at the top and bottom have been removed. The support was extended with the lining canvas by approx. 1.5 cm at both the top and bottom.
Preparatory layers The triple ground extends up to the tacking edges on the left and right, and up to the current edges of the support at the top and bottom. The first, brownish-red layer consists of fine red, brown, white and some coarser black pigment particles. The second, beige-grey ground contains coarse white and slightly smaller ochre-coloured and black pigment particles. The third, dark grey-brown layer is composed of black, white and a few coarse ochre-coloured pigment particles. Brushstrokes in the ground are visible throughout the paint surface.
Underdrawing No underdrawing could be detected with the naked eye or infrared photography.
Paint layers The paint extends up to the tacking edges on the left and right, and up to the current edges of the support at the top and bottom. The figures and their faces were laid out in translucent dark brown paint. This undermodelling has remained visible along some contours and in parts of the hair. The faces were built up wet in wet and from dark to light. The apparel, draperies and altar were constructed from a mid-tone with lighter and darker paint applied wet in wet. A red glaze was used in the carpet in the foreground, the mantle of the kneeling figure in the centre and the bodice of the woman behind him on the far right. Bright colours are limited mainly to the foreground, while the rest of the palette consists of subdued browns and greys. The paint surface is smooth, with dotted highlights indicating metal or metal thread, for example in the bowl and sword in the foreground and the clothing of the king and the kneeling woman beside him.
Anna Krekeler, 2023
Fair. The canvas has a restored tear of approx. 12 cm above the cow’s head on the left. The varnish is very thick, has areas of a white haze throughout and saturates poorly.
…; ? collection Geraerd Luycke;1…;2 from the dealer Sulley & Co., London, fl. 3,000, to the museum, through the mediation of the Vereniging Rembrandt, 1905
Object number: SK-A-2220
Credit line: Purchased with the support of the Vereniging Rembrandt
Copyright: Public domain
Salomon Koninck (Amsterdam 1609 - Amsterdam 1656)
According to De Bie, who appears to have known the artist personally or someone close to him, Salomon Koninck was born in 1609, which is confirmed by a number of notarized documents recording his age at various stages in later life. He was the son of Pieter de Koninck, a goldsmith from Antwerp who acquired Amsterdam citizenship in 1595 and was a brother of Aert de Koninck, the father of the landscapists Jacob and Philips – making Salomon Koninck their cousin. His family was Mennonite, but he had himself baptized as a Remonstrant in 1638. De Bie states that Pieter de Koninck’s great interest in art as a frequent purchaser of drawings and paintings at auction, led him to send Salomon, who was 12 years old at the time, to the painter David Colijns for drawing lessons. He was later apprenticed to François Venant and Claes Moeyaert. In 1630 he joined the Guild of St Luke in Amsterdam, and in 1638 he married Abigael van Nieulandt, a daughter of the artist Adriaen van Nieulandt. Koninck’s earliest dated extant picture, An Old Man Counting Money, is from 1635,3 and his last one, Portrait of Pieter Coenen and his Children, from 1656, the year of his death.4 His only known pupil was Bernard van Vollenhoven (1633-after 1691).
Koninck produced biblical and classical histories, tronies and genre pieces, such as scholars reading or writing in their studies and men weighing gold. Although Houbraken claims that the artist was a good portraitist only one work of that type has survived, the aforementioned painting of Pieter Coenen and his offspring. Koninck’s output does not betray his training with Colijns and Venant, and Moeyaert’s influence is only peripherally discernible. On the other hand, Rembrandt’s fijnschilder manner and striking use of chiaroscuro from the late 1620s and early 1630s had a profound effect on him. Not only did he adopt and use this style throughout his career, he also made a number of pictures that are heavily indebted to Rembrandt for their subject matter and compositions, such as The Repentant Judas and Susanna and the Elders.5 Koninck also borrowed motifs from Rubens on occasion. His work was highly esteemed in his own day, judging from the names of the contemporary owners of his paintings reported by De Bie, who included Joan Huydecoper and the king of Denmark.
Jonathan Bikker, 2023
References
C. de Bie, Het gulden cabinet van de edel vrij schilder const, inhoudende den lof vande vermarste schilders, architecte, beldthowers ende plaetsnijders van deze eeuw, Antwerp 1662, p. 250; J. von Sandrart, Academie der Bau-, Bild- und Mahlerey-Künste von 1675: Leben der berühmten Maler, Bildhauer und Baumeister, ed. A.R. Peltzer, Munich 1925 (ed. princ. Nuremberg 1675), p. 190; A. Houbraken, De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen, I, Amsterdam 1718, p. 344; A.D. de Vries, ‘Aanteekeningen naar aanleiding van Rembrandt’s etsen’, Oud Holland 1 (1883), pp. 292-310, esp. pp. 304-10; A. Bredius and N. de Roever, ‘Pieter Lastman en François Venant’, Oud Holland 4 (1886), pp. 1-23, esp. p. 19; A. Bredius, Künstler-Inventare, I, The Hague 1915, p. 170; ibid., VII, 1921, p. 35; Hofstede de Groot in U. Thieme and F. Becker (eds.), Allgemeines Lexikon der bildenden Künstler von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart, XXI, Leipzig 1927, pp. 274-76; H. Gerson, Philips Koninck: Ein Beitrag zur Erforschung der holländischen Malerei des XVII. Jahrhunderts, Berlin 1936, p. 86; W. Sumowski, Gemälde der Rembrandt-Schüler, III, Landau/Pfalz 1986, pp. 1627-31; Zadelhof in J. Turner (ed.), The Dictionary of Art, XVIII, New York 1996, pp. 226-28; J.G.C.A. Briels, Vlaamse schilders en de dageraad van Hollands Gouden Eeuw 1585-1630, Antwerp 1997, p. 348; R. Lambour, ‘Het doopsgezind milieu van Michiel van Musscher (1645-1705) en van andere schilders in zeventiende-eeuws Amsterdam: Een revisie en ontdekking’, Oud Holland 125 (2012), pp. 193-214, esp. p. 197; Van der Molen in Saur Allgemeines Künstlerlexikon: Die Bildenden Künstler aller Zeiten und Völker, LXXXI, Munich/Leipzig 2014, p. 265; E.J. Sluijter, Rembrandt’s Rivals: History Painting in Amsterdam 1630-1650, Amsterdam/Philadelphia 2015, pp. 199-213
The Old Testament story of King Solomon’s idolatry, in which the aged monarch, once renowned for his wisdom, is persuaded by his foreign wives and concubines to worship heathen gods, was tackled by a number of artists from Rembrandt’s circle. Willem de Poorter’s painting from around 1636-40 in the Rijksmuseum may well be the earliest of those treatments.6 Although horizontal rather than vertical in format and much larger,7 this 1644 canvas by Salomon Koninck incorporates the standard diagonal composition already present in De Poorter’s work. Both pictures show the king in the centre on an elevated platform surrounded by a few of his women, one of whom is seen from behind. Here she acts as a repoussoir on the right, and has been given a counterpart on the left in the form of a young man accompanying a sacrificial cow. In order to emphasize the exoticism of Solomon’s harem and the idols they worshipped, De Poorter included a couple of black females, whereas Koninck shows two young black servants, one assisting the priest and the other holding a parasol above a wife on the right.
The wall in the background has a vaulted opening which provides a view through to a large circular building, quite likely the Temple in Jerusalem that was raised under Solomon’s direction during his years of wisdom and glory, before he was corrupted by his foreign wives and concubines.8 Koninck probably derived this motif from a red chalk drawing of the subject by Rembrandt from around 1637.9 Even the lopsided supporting elements of the arch reflect the eccentric design of the interior in the sheet. In both works, the clarity and unity of the temple of the true religion are contrasted with the illogical and structurally unsound architecture of the heathen temple. One assumes that Koninck was also inspired by the Rembrandt prototype to depict the idol as a seated Venus accompanied by Amor.10 The round pedestal upon which the statue is mounted, as well as the curtained canopy above it, and possibly the king’s raised hands, suggest that Koninck also knew Philips Galle’s 1565 engraving of Solomon’s idolatry.11
The strange container on the altar reproduces the famed gilded silver jug with lid created by Adam van Vianen in 1614, now in the Rijksmuseum.12 Koninck included it in a number of his paintings (as did Pieter Lastman and Gerbrand van den Eeckhout), but in contrast to his other works, the organic, anti-classical style of the ewer, carried through in the altar and the priest’s headdress, may well have an iconographic function here; Koninck perhaps intended its convoluted and seemingly uncontrolled curves as a metaphor for the irrational worship of the heathen idol. At the very least, it serves to underline the diverse extraction of Solomon’s wives and concubines, and the gods they venerated.
As is typical of Koninck’s history paintings, sumptuous reds and bold yellow accents stand out in a predominantly subdued palette. Another hallmark of his style is the preoccupation with shimmering fabrics and highlights in the hair of the figures. With their small pointy noses, beady eyes and tiny mouths – not to mention their frizzy coiffures and the intensely blushing cheeks of the women – all appear to have the same genetic makeup; Solomon’s wives could easily pass as sisters, and the king himself could be mistaken for a twin brother of the priest. Also characteristic for the artist is the shaft of bright light that enters the further dark stage from the left. Koninck’s model for the pronounced chiaroscuro in this and other works was Rembrandt’s history pieces from the 1630s, such as Daniel and Cyrus before the Idol Bel of 1633.13 Middelkoop’s suggestion that here it is the admonishing light of God and that Solomon raises his hands in supplication to it is not very convincing.14 Not only is there no biblical basis for such an intervention, but no other pictures of the theme include such a scene, and it seems strange that God’s light should come from the left side of the composition where the idol and sacrificial cow are located rather than from the back, where the Jewish Temple is situated.
In his biography of Salomon Koninck in Het gulden cabinet of 1662, Cornelis de Bie records a work of this subject in the possession of a certain Geraerd Luycke,15 possibly the Amsterdam silk merchant Gerard (or Gerrit) Luijcken (c. 1616-1677) who originated from Zevenbergen. His ownership of Koninck’s Idolatry of King Solomon is not documented, but that he had a taste for paintings can be inferred from a 1636 transaction in which he borrowed a number of pictures from the art dealer and artist Elias Hoomis to decorate his house on the occasion of his marriage to Anna Pietersdr Bloemendael.16 Given his profession, Luijcken would have appreciated the attention Koninck paid to the rendering of fabrics in the present canvas.
Jonathan Bikker, 2023
See Key to abbreviations, Rijksmuseum painting catalogues and Acknowledgements
W. Sumowski, Gemälde der Rembrandt-Schüler, III, Landau/Pfalz 1986, pp. 1628, 1642, no. 1084, with earlier literature; N. Middelkoop, The Golden Age of Dutch Art: Seventeenth Century Paintings from the Rijksmuseum and Australian Collections, exh. cat. Perth (Art Gallery of Western Australia)/Adelaide (Art Gallery of South Australia)/Brisbane (Queensland Art Gallery) 1997-98, pp. 104-05, no. 39, with earlier literature; E.J. Sluijter, Rembrandt’s Rivals: History Painting in Amsterdam 1630-1650, Amsterdam/Philadelphia 2015, p. 202
1910, pp. 441-42, no. 1375a; 1934, p. 157, no. 1375a; 1960, p. 165, no. 1375 A 1; 1976, p. 326, no. A 2220
Jonathan Bikker, 2023, 'Salomon Koninck, The Idolatry of King Solomon (I Kings 11:4-8), 1644', in J. Bikker (ed.), Dutch Paintings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.12067
(accessed 26 November 2024 10:35:59).