Object data
oil on canvas
support: height 150 cm × width 195 cm × thickness 5 cm
frame: height 159.6 cm × width 203.6 cm × depth 9.8 cm
Jacob Fransz van der Merck
c. 1650 - c. 1659
oil on canvas
support: height 150 cm × width 195 cm × thickness 5 cm
frame: height 159.6 cm × width 203.6 cm × depth 9.8 cm
Support The support consists of two pieces of similar plain-weave canvas with a horizontal seam at approx. 40 cm from the bottom, and has been glue-lined. All tacking edges have been removed.
Preparatory layers The single, yellowish beige ground extends up to the current edges of the support. It consists of red, black and white pigment particles.
Underdrawing No underdrawing could be detected with the naked eye or infrared photography.
Paint layers The paint extends up to the current edges of the support. The composition was built up from the back to the front leaving reserves, the edges of which are occasionally visible between the compositional elements. Impasto and glazes were used for the fruits and the jewellery. The designs in the borders of the lace collars and the cuffs were created by scratching in the wet paint.
Michel van de Laar, 2023
Poor. There are 18 vertical fold lines in the canvas, indicating that it was either rolled up or folded prior to its lining. The cohesion of the support with the lining canvas is locally poor, as is the attachment of the ground and paint layers to the support. The painting is severely damaged, and discoloured retouchings and overpainted passages are present throughout. Most of the retouchings, overpaint and yellowed varnish were removed from the man’s face and its immediate surroundings. This area received no further treatment and was left in its damaged state.
…; donated by Adriaan Justus Enschedé (1829-1896), Haarlem, to the Nederlandsch Museum voor Geschiedenis en Kunst, The Hague (inv. no. 145), with SK-A-854, 1874; transferred to the museum, 18851
Object number: SK-A-853
Credit line: Gift of A.J. Enschedé, Haarlem
Copyright: Public domain
Jacob van der Merck (’s-Gravendeel c. 1610 - Leiden 1664)
Jacob van der Merck is first mentioned in the sources in 1628, when he enrolled in the Delft Guild of St Luke under the name Jacob Fransz van Sgravendeel. It is therefore assumed that he was born around 1610 in the village of ’s-Gravendeel, south-west of Dordrecht. Van der Merck left Delft for parts unknown in 1631, only reappearing five years later in The Hague, where he registered as a master with the painters’ guild in 1636 and was nominated as its warden in 1639, but not elected. In 1638 he had married Lysbeth Jacobsdr van Cortgeene, and a daughter, called Maria or Margaretha, later became the wife of the artist Adriaen Cornelisz Beeldemaker. Van der Merck enlisted as a member of the Dordrecht Guild of St Luke in 1640, so he must have worked there for a while, but he carried on living in The Hague, where he bought a house on Zuideinde near the Wagenbrug in 1641. In 1649 he was a widower when his wedding to Geertruyt Jacobsdr van Schaapshuysen of Dordrecht took place. He collaborated with Bartholomeus van Bassen and others on the restoration of paintings, for which they were paid 30 pounds in 1650. Van der Merck moved to Leiden in or before 1658, when he registered with the local Guild of St Luke. He received several important portrait commissions in the city, including four likenesses of captains of the civic guard in 1657, two of which are now lost,2 and one of the governors of the Loridan almshouse in 1658.3 Jacob van der Merck died in Leiden in September 1664 and was buried in the Pieterskerk.
Van der Merck mainly produced genre scenes in the manner of Anthonie Palamedesz at the beginning of his career, which suggests that he trained in Delft. Although he made several creditable still lifes he specialized in portraits of both individuals and groups. His earliest dated one is that of Mattheus van Rees of 1630,4 and his last one a 1661 likeness of the Leiden professor Johannes Abrahamsz Heydanus.5 It is known from a notarized document of 1666 that Jan van Goyen sometimes painted landscape backgrounds in Van der Merck’s works, but no such collaboration has yet been demonstrated convincingly.
Richard Harmanni, 2023
References
F.D.O. Obreen, Archief voor Nederlandsche kunstgeschiedenis: Verzameling van meerendeels onuitgegeven berichten en mededeelingen betreffende Nederlandsche schilders, plaatsnijders, beeldhouwers, bouwmeesters, juweliers, goud- en zilverdrijvers [enz.], I, Rotterdam 1877-78, p. 216; ibid., V, 1882-83, pp. 73, 96, 220; Bredius in A.D. de Vries, A. Bredius and S. Muller, Catalogus der schilderijen in het Museum Kunstliefde te Utrecht, coll. cat. 1885, pp. 76-77; A. Bredius, ‘Bartholomeus van Bassen, schilder-architect’, Haagsch Jaarboekje 6 (1894), pp. 85-90, esp. p. 90; U. Thieme and F. Becker (eds.), Allgemeines Lexikon der bildenden Künstler von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart, XXIV, Leipzig 1930, p. 409; J.M. Montias, Artists and Artisans in Delft: A Socio-Economic Study of the Seventeenth Century, Princeton 1982, pp. 143, 344; R.E.O. Ekkart, ‘Leidse burgers in beeld: Portrettisten in Leiden van de late zestiende tot de vroege achttiende eeuw’, in T.H. Lunsingh Scheurleer, C.W. Fock and A.J. van Dissel (eds.), Het Rapenburg: Geschiedenis van een Leidse gracht, VIa, Leiden 1992, pp. 3-39, esp. p. 19; Löffler in E. Buijsen et al., Haagse schilders in de Gouden Eeuw: Het Hoogsteder Lexicon van alle schilders werkzaam in Den Haag 1600-1700, exh. cat. The Hague (Haags Historisch Museum) 1998-99, p. 328; Seelig in Saur Allgemeines Künstlerlexikon: Die Bildenden Künstler aller Zeiten und Völker, LXXXIX, Munich/Leipzig 2016, p. 138; Bredius notes, RKD
This family portrait by Jacob van der Merck was one of two paintings that Adriaan Justus Enschedé, city archivist of Haarlem, presented to the forerunner of the Rijksmuseum in December 1874.6 The Nederlandsch Museum voor Geschiedenis en Kunst was still being governed at the time by the Commission of State Advisers for Monuments of History and Art, of which Enschedé had become a member shortly before. The donation was discussed at a committee meeting on 14 January 1875,7 and according to the minutes Enschedé had discovered both works in Amsterdam. The portrait by Van der Merck ‘lay flat on the floor to prevent peat getting into the cracks in the floor’, and the other painting, which was a copy after Abraham Liedts’s likeness of Admiral Pieter Florisz,8 was wrapped around the slabs of peat. Unfortunately, there is no mention of the location, so the earlier provenance of the pictures cannot be traced.9 Van der Merck’s canvas was thus in a very battered condition when it entered the Nederlandsch Museum and it was then probably restored. Nothing was said about its state when it was transferred from The Hague to Amsterdam in 1885.10 However, there is a note in the Rijksmuseum’s inventory book that it was partly overpainted. Today the man’s head has disappeared completely. It was very probably decided to rectify the previous intervention but that was done too radically.11
Despite its sorry condition, the work does give a reasonable idea of Van der Merck’s qualities as a portraitist. The balustrade and other architectural details suggest that the family is on the terrace of a building resembling a pavilion. The married couple are seated, with a younger woman, probably a daughter, standing on the right. It was not uncommon for companies to be depicted outdoors surrounded by greenery in the seventeenth century, but in the 1650s artists like Bartholomeus van der Helst increasingly placed them on a terrace with columns and other structural elements in the background, sometimes combined with a drapery. Anthony van Dyck had been using motifs like that in his portraits since the 1620s. The vertical shape behind Van der Merck’s male sitter might have been intended to be a circular pillar like the one in the top right corner, but it is no longer clearly distinguishable. Although the original effect may have been spoiled by wear, a clumsy handling of architectural details is also found in Van der Merck’s 1660 likeness of Willem van der Rijt and his family.12 There, too, he included a drapery with tassels, and judging by a painting he made of the governors of the Leiden Loridan almshouse it was a favourite device of his in group portraits.13 He also employed it in still lifes from time to time.14
The man shown here is using his right hand to indicate or activate something outside the painting. It would not have been the couple’s children, as is the case in Van der Merck’s far larger family portrait of 1653 in the Frans Hals Museum in Haarlem.15 Although there is no cusping visible, indicating that the picture may have been cut down,16 it is not certain that the composition has indeed been cropped. At any rate, the position of the signature on the cornice of the pillar does not give the impression that the canvas has been substantially trimmed on the left, the side the man is pointing at.
According to the transfer list of 1885, the painting bears the year ‘1654’.17 That was adopted at first in the museum’s inventory book but later changed to ‘165.’, which is how it was catalogued in 1976.18 Not the slightest trace of any date can now be seen. Overzealous cleaning has removed it entirely, along with the last four letters of the signature. However, the reported year of 1654 would fit in well with the women’s dresses, especially the starched, lace-trimmed falling whisk collars and the wide, short cylindrical cuffs.19 If the date was read correctly at the time, the work is from the artist’s Hague period.
The seated woman has a blue-and-white bowl in her lap filled with citrus fruit and is holding a lemon in her right hand, which could be a reference to marital fidelity in this context.20 Since such products were very expensive at the time, their combination with the dish of Chinese porcelain proclaims the wealth of the patron.21 Van der Merck’s talents for still lifes would have come in handy here.
Richard Harmanni, 2023
See Key to abbreviations, Rijksmuseum painting catalogues and Acknowledgements
1903, p. 171, no. 1539; 1976, p. 376, no. A 853
Richard Harmanni, 2023, 'Jacob Fransz. van der Merck, Portrait of a Family, c. 1650 - c. 1659', in J. Bikker (ed.), Dutch Paintings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.9070
(accessed 24 November 2024 01:26:24).