Object data
oil on canvas
support: height 103.3 cm × width 89.3 cm
depth 7.5 cm
Johannes van Swinderen (attributed to)
c. 1628 - c. 1636
oil on canvas
support: height 103.3 cm × width 89.3 cm
depth 7.5 cm
The plain-weave canvas support has been lined. The tacking edges have been cut and cusping is not visible. The ground layer is grey. The paint layers were applied wet in wet, and brushmarking is especially visible in the figure’s clothing and the still life. A pentimento reveals that the turban was made smaller.
Good.
...; from Henri Thomas, Louvain, fl. 480, to the museum, November 1907
Object number: SK-A-2310
Copyright: Public domain
Johannes van Swinderen (Zutphen 1594 - Zutphen 1636)
Johannes van Swinderen was born in 1594 in Zutphen, where he married Margaretha van Opgant in 1617. He died in the same town in 1636. Van Swinderen was apparently a part-time painter. As his father before him, he was a ‘gerichtsschrijver’, or law clerk, by profession. It is not known from whom or where he received his training, and no signed paintings by him have survived. He is documented as having executed an ambitious Judgement of Solomon for the council chamber of Zutphen Town Hall in 1627.1 On the basis of this work, Slatkes has attributed three other paintings to him.
Jonathan Bikker, 2007
References
Gimberg 1911, p. 229; Slatkes 1983; Ekkart 2002a, p. 66
Slatkes was the first scholar to question the false Pieter de Grebber monogram and the date of 1647 on this painting, and to point out the lack of stylistic similarity to the Haarlem artist’s work.2 He attributed the painting instead to Johannes van Swinderen. Indeed, the artist’s physiognomy in the Rijksmuseum portrait compares well with that of the figure of Solomon in Van Swinderen’s only documented work, The Judgement of Solomon of 1627 (fig. a). Both works also show the same highlighted, angular, rather schematic drapery style. The type of turban worn by the artist in the Rijksmuseum painting, as well as the rendering of the tight folds, are closer to the turban in another painting attributed by Slatkes to Van Swinderen, Athenaïs Banished by her Husband, the Emperor Theodosius II,3 than they are to the turban worn by Solomon in the 1627 painting. Both The Judgement of Solomon and, even more so, Athenaïs Banished by her Husband, are reminiscent of Ter Brugghen’s work, suggesting that Van Swinderen spent some time in Utrecht.4 The vanitas still life on the table in the Rijksmuseum work, however, indicates that part of Van Swinderen’s inspiration also came, in this case, from either Haarlem or Leiden.
Slatkes favours a date close to the 1627 Judgement of Solomon, and regards the oriental costume worn by the artist as a ‘surprising anticipation of Rembrandt’s self-portraits in exotic dress’.5 This, however, seems too much praise for a part-time, provincial artist. One is, therefore, prompted to think that Van Swinderen followed a prototype that is no longer traceable, or that the painting was executed after 1631, the date of Rembrandt’s Self-Portrait in Oriental Attire,6 and the version of it by Rembrandt’s Leiden pupil, Isaac de Jouderville.7
The three-quarter profile pose of the figure of Solomon in the 1627 painting suggests that he and his look-alike in the Rijksmuseum painting are not portraits of Van Swinderen himself. The rather haughty demeanour of the extravagantly dressed ‘antique’ artist, and the skull, indicate that the painting carries a weighty message. The witty placement of the skull above the drawn torso of a man suggests the triumph of death over art, but crowning the skull is the painter’s palette and brushes. Art, therefore, comes out on top: ars longa, vita brevis.
Jonathan Bikker, 2007
See Bibliography and Rijksmuseum painting catalogues
See Key to abbreviations and Acknowledgements
This entry was published in J. Bikker (ed.), Dutch Paintings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, I: Artists Born between 1570 and 1600, coll. cat. Amsterdam 2007, no. 277.
Blankert 1980, p. 18 (as Pieter de Grebber); Slatkes 1983; Raupp 1984, p. 267 (as Pieter de Grebber); Tapié in Caen-Paris 1990, p. 186, no. F.47; Ekkart 2002a, pp. 66-67
1911, p. 154, no. 1001a (as Pieter de Grebber); 1976, p. 248, no. A 2310 (as Pieter de Grebber); 1992, p. 86, no. A 2310; 2007, no. 277
J. Bikker, 2007, 'attributed to Johannes van Swinderen, An Antique Artist, c. 1628 - c. 1636', in J. Bikker (ed.), Dutch Paintings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.5550
(accessed 22 November 2024 16:41:42).