Sunday, November 7, 2021

Rigid Dutch Portraits (by Numerous Hands)

Lodewijk van der Helst
Portrait of Adriana Hinlopen
1667
oil on canvas
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

Adriaen Hanneman
Portrait of Richard Steward
1651
oil on canvas
All Souls College, University of Oxford

Nicolaes Maes
Portrait of a Woman
ca. 1670-80
oil on panel
Ulster Museum, Belfast

Jan Lievens
Portrait of a Man
ca. 1650
oil on canvas
Harvard Art Museums

Hendrick Pot
Portrait of a Woman
ca. 1635
oil on panel
Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio 

Gerard ter Borch
Portrait of a Man
ca. 1668-69
oil on canvas
Guildhall Art Gallery, London

Jan Albertsz Rootius
Portrait of Agatha van Neck
1658
oil on canvas
Musée d'Ixelles, Brussels

Pieter van der Werff
Portrait of a Gentleman
ca. 1680
oil on canvas
Victoria Art Gallery, Bath

Abraham van Westerveld
Portrait of Cornelisz de Witte
ca. 1650-60
oil on panel
private collection

Abraham van Westerveld
Portrait of Lieutenant-Admiral
Cornelis Tromp in Roman Garb

ca. 1670-90
oil on panel
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

Willem van der Vliet
Portrait of a Woman with a Crucifix
before 1642
oil on panel
private collection

Willem van der Vliet
Portrait of Maria Jorisdr Pijnaecker
1626
oil on panel
Museum Prinsenhof, Delft

Willem van der Vliet
Portrait of Willem de Langue
1626
oil on panel
Museum Prinsenhof, Delft

Willem van der Vliet
Portrait of Suitbertus Purmerent
1631
oil on panel
National Gallery, London

Willem van der Vliet
Portrait of a Little Boy
1638
oil on panel
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

"The assumption of portraits' transparency to their sitters' physiognomies follows seventeenth-century Dutch theorists who describe portraits as transcriptions of an objective reality, as unmediated visual analogues for actual persons.  It lies behind Karel van Mander's disparagement of portraiture in these oft-quoted lines from his life of the portraitist Michiel van Miereveldt, painter of Delft, who "from among other talents with which Nature abundantly endowed him, chose portrait painting. In our Netherlands there is this deficiency or unfortunate situation, especially in these present times, that there is little work to be had that requires composition so as to give the youngsters and painters the opportunity to become excellent at histories, figures and nudes through practice. For it is mostly portraits that they get the opportunity to paint; so that most of them, because of the allure of profit, or for their survival, usually take this side-road of art (that is, portrait painting) and set off without having time or inclination to seek out or follow the road of history and figures that leads to the highest perfection."

"Van Mander grudgingly admitted, however, that because it depicted the noble subject of the human body, portraiture should be accorded at least some respect: "One can also make something worthwhile from a portrait: that a face, after all the most important part of the human body, contains quite enough so as to be able to disclose and reveal the quality and efficacy of art."  At the end of the century, Samuel van Hoogstraten disdained "the portrait makers – who can render reasonably good likenesses, and properly imitate eyes, noses and mouths – I wouldn't even place beyond or above the first level of painting." 

– Ann Jensen Adams, from Looking at Seventeenth-Century Art: Realism Reconsidered (Cambridge University Press, 1997)