Object data
oil on canvas
support: height 109 cm × width 173 cm
Pauwels van Hillegaert
c. 1630 - c. 1635
oil on canvas
support: height 109 cm × width 173 cm
The plain-weave canvas support has been lined. Cusping is visible on all sides. The ground layer, visible in the abraded areas, is whitish. The painting is smoothly executed with visible brushstrokes in foreground and figures. The painter may have allowed the weave of the canvas to show through in transparently painted areas, such as the marshy land on the left.
Fair. There are several discoloured areas of retouching, while the varnish is irregular and has discoloured considerably. There is a restored, stable tear of 5 cm in the sky on the right.
...; purchased by Everardus Temminck, for the museum, 11 August 1803;1 entered the museum, 22 December 18082
Object number: SK-A-435
Copyright: Public domain
Pauwels van Hillegaert (Amsterdam c. 1596 - Amsterdam 1640)
Pauwels van Hillegaert was born into a southern Netherlandish immigrant family in Amsterdam. This was around 1596, for in a document of 1620 he is said to be 24 years old. The name of his teacher is not known. He married Anneken Hoomis of Antwerp in 1620 in Amsterdam. In 1639 he was a member of the Amsterdam civic guard, and appears as such in a militia piece by Nicolaes Eliasz Pickenoy.3 He was buried in Amsterdam on 10 February 1640.
Van Hillegaert is usually referred to as a ‘battle painter’ in the archives. Today he is better known for siege scenes with princes Maurits and Frederik Hendrik and for equestrian portraits of them than for cavalry battles. He often made several versions of his paintings, and probably worked mainly for the open market and less often on commission for the House of Orange or official bodies. His earliest known work dates from 1619. He may have supplied the figures in a landscape by Alexander Keirincx. His work is closely related to that of Henri Ambrosius Pacx.
His two sons, Francois I (1621-60) and Paulus II (1631-58), became painters too, and were probably his pupils and followers. After their father’s death Francois inherited ‘all his father’s painting implements, likewise the drawings by the same together with all the unfinished paintings’.4
Yvette Bruijnen, 2007
References
Bredius III, 1917, pp. 828-29; Hofstede de Groot in Thieme/Becker XVII, 1924, pp. 93-94; Briels 1997, p. 337; Van Maarseveen 1998a, pp. 83, 86, 103
This painting was attributed to Esaias van de Velde from its purchase by the museum in 1803 until Hofstede de Groot gave it to Henri Ambrosius Pacx in 1899.5 In the collection catalogue of 1903 it was attributed to Van Hillegaert, and that has never been doubted since. The style matches the artist’s signed works, this being particularly evident in the distinctive horses, the dogs with their relatively long legs, the soldiers’ numerous schematic lances, and the blue-green tints of the background. Van Hillegaert probably executed it within a few years of the victory at ’s-Hertogenbosch in 1629. He probably based the cartographic landscape on the maps of the siege published by Jacques Prempart in 1630,6 which enables the painting to be dated between 1630 and 1635.
In contrast to Van Hillegaert’s Siege of ’s-Hertogenbosch (SK-A-607), in which Frederik Hendrik and Ernst Casimir are depicted as triumphant commanders in the foreground, the focus here is on the panoramic landscape around the city, with the departing prelates and the Spanish garrison. On the dark, elevated foreground on the right are a few anonymous horsemen. Van Hillegaert would usually have placed the commanders here, but in this composition Frederik Hendrik and Ernst Casimir have been placed in a less prominent position beside the carriage in the left foreground at the head of the procession leaving the city. Seated in the carriage is a person with a fur-trimmed gown and hands clasped in prayer. It has been suggested that this is the wife of ’s-Hertogenbosch’s governor Van Grobbendonck.7 Another, more likely possibility is that it is Michael Ophovius (1571-1637), Bishop of ’s-Hertogenbosch, who signed the capitulation on 14 September 1629 and went into exile. The members of the various monastic orders gathered around the carriage also argue for this identification. The facial features of the individual are barely distinguishable, so comparison with known portraits of Ophovius is of no help.8 This individual, in any event, is a dignitary on the Spanish side who is being personally led out of the city by Frederik Hendrik and Ernst Casimir.
The cartographic nature of the panoramic landscape is reminiscent of works by Pieter Snayers, but Van Hillegaert opted for a more realistic perspective with a lower horizon.9 A Siege of ’s-Hertogenbosch in the Rijksmuseum by Van Hillegaert (SK-A-848) has the same, almost cartographic landscape, and was acquired by the museum in 1885 as the pendant of the present painting.10 Hofstede de Groot also viewed these paintings as pendants.11 The dimensions of the two works differ slightly, though, the horizons are at different levels, and the figures are not quite the same size. Both works must therefore be regarded as separate visual records of the battle for ’s-Hertogenbosch.
Yvette Bruijnen, 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. 126.
Hofstede de Groot 1899a, pp. 165-66 (as Henri Ambrosius Pacx); Huiskamp in Münster-Osnabrück 1998, p. 353, no. 1002; Van Maarseveen in Delft 1998, pp. 288-89, no. 66
1809, p. 72, no. 313 (as Esaias van de Velde); 1858, p. 191, no. 428 (as Anonymous); 1880, pp. 310-11, no. 362 (as Esaias van de Velde); 1887, p. 174, no. 1491 (as Esaias van de Velde); 1903, p. 127, no. 1182; 1934, p. 130, no. 1182; 1960, p. 135, no. 1182; 1976, p. 276, no. A 435; 1992, p. 57, no. A 435; 2007, no. 126
Y. Bruijnen, 2007, 'Pauwels van Hillegaert, The Defeated Spanish Garrison Leaving ’s-Hertogenbosch, 17 September 1629, c. 1630 - c. 1635', in J. Bikker (ed.), Dutch Paintings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.8686
(accessed 26 November 2024 08:25:27).