Quiringh van Brekelenkam (Zwammerdam [?] after 1622 ca Leiden)

Similar documents
Jan Adriaensz van Staveren (Leiden 1613/ Leiden)

Pendant Portraits of Samuel van Acker and His Wife (?), 1683: Portrait of Samuel van Acker. Willem van Mieris (Leiden Leiden)

2019 The Leiden Collection

Pendant Portraits of Samuel van Acker and His Wife (?), 1683

Hermit Praying in the Wilderness. Willem van Mieris (Leiden Leiden)

Elderly Couple in an Interior. ca oil on panel 52 x 39.6 cm FM-100. Frans van Mieris (Leiden Leiden) 2019 The Leiden Collection

The patronymic that alternates every generation poses also serious problems.

Bust of an Old Man. ca oil on oval panel 20.4 x 17.8 cm JvS-101. Attributed to Gerrit Dou (Leiden Leiden)

SETTLERS AND BUILDERS OF WOOD COUNTY

Chance Favors the Prepared Mind

Richard Hardaker Revisited

Elderly Man. ca oil on panel 50.9 x 40.6 cm GD-109. Leiden School (Leiden Leiden) 2019 The Leiden Collection

Johann, Henry, and Otto: All Names For One and One For All? Finding the True Identity of Otto Krieger

Leiden Fijnschilders and the Local Art Market in the Golden Age

Las Villas del Norte

Individual Narrative of Sarah 7 Leverich [145] Daughter of Edward 6 Leverich [60] and Patience Moore Wife of Peter Gorsline Jr.

Rommel Pot Player. Jacob Toorenvliet (Leiden Leiden) oil on copper 17.8 x 13.8 cm JT The Leiden Collection

CHAPTER 4 WILLIAM WILLIAMS

Introduction to Michael Woods (Sr. and Jr.) Age Books and One Correction. by Cecilia L. Fabos-Becker, 2 August, 2014

2. Please use maiden names where applicable, and all given names of ancestors.

THOS. AGNEW & SONS LTD. 6 ST. JAMES S PLACE, LONDON, SW1A 1NP Tel: +44 (0)

Carel Fabritius (Middenbeemster Delft)

MARY HINDLEY ( ) 1848MARY/1

Descendants of John Hassall

Artists: Vincent van Gogh

Vincent Van Gogh. By Vincent van Gogh

Tacoma (Washington) News Tribune, 31 December 1949.

How Do I Start My Family History?

James Luxon Ellis ( )

Stephen Bromley ( )

Point de Vue 1 March 2017 Raphaël Morata Thomas Kaplan Philanthropist with a Heart of Gold

A Genealogy Report for

Repository Civil War Museum, Resource Center Kenosha, Wisconsin

From the Office of the President General. Keep this information sheet for your records; do not submit with your application

Maiden Names: Unlocking the mystery of the Mrs. Jim Lawson Professional Genealogist

San Joaquin County First Families Certificate Program

Portrait of a Woman in Profile. ca oil on panel 13.3 x 11.3 cm signed in dark paint along left midpoint of oval: GDou GD-110

THE FAMILY OF RICHARD HARDAKER, BADGER OF OTLEY, WHO DIED IN 1596

Advanced Concepts. Genealogy and History. Genealogy and History

Victor Pootman & Maria Davidts

CITATION: Gilbert Family Collection, Collection 5, Box number, Folder number, Irving Archives, Irving Public Library.

Clement Leeds Report Report Summary

The Mysterious Case of the Mixed Up Ralph Driffills

October Ancestral Newsletter #23

PROOF ARGUMENTS HOW AND WHY

RG Chepstow. Caerwent. Caerwent

Roderick Williams alias Powell, Elinor Jeffreys and Elizabeth Evans

First Families of Ashland County

William , miller of Sarre William took over the mill at his father s death 5. He was unmarried and childless.

ARCHDIOCESE OF MILWAUKEE SACRAMENTAL RECORDS INSTRUCTION MANUAL

2f. Ellen (Nellie) Beech Kelland.

Chapter 10 of Some Jasper County Pioneers Jacob and Mary Herring L. Kenyon

Folk Art and History in Weston Family Registers

THE DUTCH GOLDEN AGE

Building the Right Family Groups

Robbins Genealogy Website, May

Registry Publication 62

Mathieu Savant of Félines and Thénisy, France Gregory Childs; Clamart, France 9 July 2013

For Official Use Only Application Number. Application for Antigua and Barbuda Passport for Applicants Under 16 Years Form M. Surname: First Name:

Perry County Pioneers Lineage Society. Rules and Application Procedures

Card Players. Jan Lievens (Leiden Amsterdam) ca. 1625

Guide to the Genealogy Search

First Generation. Second Generation. 1. Location: in 1778 in Crab Run area, Highland County, VA. 1 Joseph BEATHE 2 died in 1801;.

CASE STUDY: GENEALOGY OF RENEE KAUFMAN Stephen P. Morse ( )

Ch ange of name fo r adul ts

Locust Grove Archives. Finding Aid. Young Family Collection George Innis

First Families of Lake County, Ohio

Biographical Sketches --- What are They? By D. A. Sharpe

The Kaighins of Scaresdale, Kirk German, Isle of Man

BIRTHS AND DEATHS REGISTRATION ACT

Road Blocks Where Do We Go Now? What is a Road Block? A Road Block is a perceived dead-end that you have reached in your genealogical research Road

H Oggel Family. Papers, linear ft. PARTIALLY RESTRICTED

Individual Narrative of Betsy 6 Gorsline [97] Daughter of Joseph Gorsline and Sarah 5 Leverich [26] Wife of Richard Gorsline

You are here: Home > Advice and benefits > Births > Birth - certificate amendments

Research Training Guide

The Division of Art: Specialization and the Dutch. There are many things which make the Golden Age of Dutch Art fascinating to

Rembrandt: The Painter At Work By Ernst van de Wetering, Paulien Retèl

Robert L. Graham ( )

Fleshing Out Ancestry Research How To Get the Most Out Of a Death Certificate

John Wrightstone ( )

B: EILEEN'S EARLY YEARS IN FRANKLIN:

Woman with a Lapdog, Accompanied by a Maidservant (probably Bathsheba with King David s Letter)

Descendants of Thomas Whitted & Peggy Lashley. First Generation

POSEY COUNTY FAMILY RECORDS, CA

Mrs. Mary Abel (Dr. Herman Abel)

Descendants of John Hipgrave

Singing Violinist. ca oil on panel 26.9 x 19.5 cm JO-100. Jacob Ochtervelt (Rotterdam Amsterdam) 2018 The Leiden Collection

Thomas Turner Presley Descendant Information. First Generation

Records to search: Federal census records

Portrait of a Lady, Seated with a Music Book on Her Lap

Make payable to MGCC for genealogy ONLY

JACKSON COUNTY PIONEER CERTIFICATE PROJECT

Vincent Van Gogh I Colori Del Tormento

Sir William West, aka West-246. ''This biography is a rough draft. It was auto-generated by a GEDCOM import and needs to be edited.

2018 The Leiden Collection

2017 The Leiden Collection

Orrel Whitehead ( )

Description & Finding Aid: Nellie Curnoe Greg Curnoe Collection CA OTAG SC074

Van Gogh's Van Goghs By Richard Kendall

Barre History Collection. Partridge Family Papers, BHC

Transcription:

(Zwammerdam [?] after 1622 ca. 1669 Leiden) How To Cite Bakker, Piet. "Quiringh van Brekelenkam." In The Leiden Collection Catalogue. Edited by Arthur K. Wheelock Jr. New York, 2017. https://www.theleidencollection.com/archive/. This page is available on the site's Archive. PDF of every version of this page is available on the Archive, and the Archive is managed by a permanent URL. Archival copies will never be deleted. New versions are added only when a substantive change to the narrative occurs. Quiringh Gerritsz van Brekelenkam was born in 1622. His parents were Gerrit Adriaens de Plutter and Magdalena Crijnen, both of whom were probably Catholic. His place of birth may have been Zwammerdam, a village near Alphen aan de Rijn, where his father worked as a tailor. [1] The painter thus grew up in an environment that most likely inspired him to paint the kinds of scenes on which he had a veritable patent and on which his present fame rests: the shops of tailors and cobblers, around twenty-five variants of which he produced from 1653 to 1664. [2] Brekelenkam may have received his artistic education in Leiden. According to an anonymous eighteenth-century biographer, he was een discipel van Dou (a pupil of [Gerrit] Dou), however since the similarity with the latter s work is only superficial, an apprenticeship with Dou (1613 75) is now seriously doubted. [3] Nonetheless, a previously overlooked signature on a document does point to a close connection with that Leiden master. When Dou accompanied his parents to draw up their will before a notary on 16 February 1646, they were joined by Van Brekelenkam, who signed the document: Quiringh Gerritsz van Breeckelenkam, schilder (Quiringh Gerritsz van Brekelenkam, painter). [4] Van Brekelenkam entered the newly founded Guild of Saint Luke in February 1648, the year from which his earliest dated painting also stems. [5] Moreover, in April 1648 Van Brekelenkam and Maria Jansdr Charle were married in the Catholic church of Rijnsaterwoude. [6] Quiringh and Maria had six children, all of whom were baptized in the clandestine Catholic church in the Bakkersteeg. The baptism of Van Brekelenkam s first child, Magdalena, on 9 April 1649, was witnessed by Johannes van Oudenrogge (1621/22 53), another Catholic painter. [7] Van Oudenrogge had married Van Brekelenkam s sister Aeltje in Leiden one month earlier. In 1651 the couple moved to Haarlem, where Aeltje ran a paint supply shop after Van Oudenrogge died in 1653. Death also visited the house of Quiringh van Brekelenkam, who buried Maria in the Pieterskerk in Leiden in August of 1655 shortly after the baptism of their sixth child. A mere year later, on 24 September 1656, Van Brekelenkam took a second wife, Elisabeth de Beaumont, widow of Willem Simons Romeijn and probably the daughter of a cobbler. [8] From 1657 to 1668 the couple had at least three children who, like their half-brothers and sisters before them, were all baptized as

Page 2 of 5 Catholics in the clandestine church in the Bakkersteeg. [9] According to some of his biographers, around 1656 Van Brekelenkam acquired a license from the city council to sell beer and brandy. Angelika Lasius, however, offers a plausible explanation that this request is based on a misunderstanding and, moreover, no document attesting to a liquor license has been found. [10] Two court cases in 1660 concerning overdue debts suggest that the artist had financial problems, however the amounts are not high. [11] Still, he does not seem to have been prospering. According to the above-mentioned, anonymous eighteenth-century biographer who was certain that Dou had been Van Brekelenkam s teacher, [Van Brekelenkam] had a difficult situation at home with children and a most austere life, leading him to produce many bad paintings, which he simply dashed off to earn some money. What is unfortunate about various painters from the school of Dou is that in their time there were so many highly talented artists comparable to their master [Dou], Frans van Mieris and others, that they were disregarded. [12] However, judging from the extant seventeenthcentury Leiden estate inventories, the contrary seems to have been the case: no fewer than fifty-five paintings by Van Brekelenkam are listed in twenty documents. It is noteworthy that two individuals even owned a remarkable number of works by him: the Catholic merchant Hendrick Bugge van Ring had eighteen paintings and the innkeeper Pieter van Grient certainly had eleven, possibly even as numerous as sixteen works. [13] The exact date of Van Brekelenkam s death is unknown. He paid his contribution to the Guild of Saint Luke for the last time in 1667. His youngest child was baptized one year later, on 29 May 1668, and a few dated paintings by him are known from that same year. No subsequent traces of the artist have been found, and he is thought to have died shortly after 1668. -Piet Bakker Endnotes 1. No birth certificate has been preserved. The year of birth is derived from a list of names related to the collection of the Poll Tax in Zwammerdam in 1622, in which Gerrit Adriaensz stated that he had three daughters, namely Aeltje, Hillegont, and Grietje. Thus, Quiringh must have been born in 1622 or later. For a reconstruction of the family and the changing of the name De Plutter into Brekelenkam, see A. Lasius, Quiringh van Brekelenkam (Doornspijk, 1992), 7. The fact that Brekelenkam s father was a tailor has never before been noted. Gerrit Adriaens, however, is called a kleermaker (tailor) in two successive documents of 10 February 1620. See Streekarchief Rijnlands Midden, Protocollen Zwammerdam 1618 22, inv. 17, fol. 69v, p. 70. 2. This kind of imagery was unprecedented and, moreover, found virtually no following. Eric J. Sluijter et al., Leidse fijnschilders: van Gerrit Dou tot Frans van Mieris de Jonge 1630 1760 (Exh. cat. Leiden, Stedelijk Museum de Lakenhal) (Zwolle, 1988), 87.

Page 3 of 5 3. Van Brekelenkam, together with Jan van Staveren (1613/14 69), Abraham de Pape (ca. 1620 66), and others, ranks among the Leiden painters who are not mentioned in 17th- and 18thcentury literary sources. His name first appears in an anonymous late 18th-century manuscript. See the biography of Jan van Staveren in this catalogue, in which he is called een discipel van Douw ( a pupil of Dou ). RAL, Bibliotheek 254 (portefeuille 41a); also in Angelika Lasius, Quiringh van Brekelenkam (Doornspijk, 1992), 10 11. Sluijter, however, doubts that Brekelenkam studied under Dou because his later style is too independent for this to have been the case. Sluijter believes that the similarities with Dou s work can be attributed solely to bepaalde stilistische en iconografische karakteristieken die onder de Leidse schilders van hun generatie algemeen waren ( certain stylistic and iconographical characteristics that were shared by the Leiden painters of their generation ). He does not suggest an alternative teacher (see also note 6). For the question of Brekelenkam s teacher, see Th. Bodkin, Quiringh Brekelenkam s Master, The Burlington Magazine 44 (1924): 26 41; and Angelika Lasius, Quiringh van Brekelenkam (Ph.D. diss., University of Göttingen, 1987), 82 97. 4. RAL, NA not. J. J. Verwey, inv. 114, 16 February 1646 (the documents are unnumbered and not ordered chronologically). This is the earliest document in which Brekelenkam s name appears. The will of Dou s parents, Douwe Jansz van Arentsvelt and Marritge Jansdr van Rosenburg, is recorded in Bredius s notes, but was not subject to further investigation. 5. Woman Combing a Child s Hair, oil on panel, 57 x 53.3 cm, Stedelijk Museum de Lakenhal, Leiden. Angelika Lasius, Quiringh van Brekelenkam (Doornspijk, 1992), 116 17, cat. no. 129, pl. VIII (col.). 6. The numerous variations for the spelling of the name Carle (Charle, Sjerlée, etc.) made it impossible to trace Maria s parents. Maria s parents probably emigrated from the southern Netherlands and had found employment in Leiden s cloth industry. Many people with a variant of her name came from places in the southern Netherlands (such as Belle or Poperinge) that had a flourishing cloth industry prior to 1585. 7. On Van Oudenrogge, see: Neeltje Köhler et al., Painting in Haarlem 1500 1850: The Collection of the Frans Hals Museum (Ghent and Haarlem, 2006), 263 64. Johannes van Oudenrogge, who moved to Haarlem shortly before he married, trained in Leiden under his uncle Adriaen Jansz van Witveld (ca. 1581 1638). He was probably also a Catholic, since he wed before the aldermen. Because of the family relationship, the shared faith, and similar artistic specialty workshop interiors the possibility that Oudenrogge and Brekelenkam also had the same teacher and that Brekelenkam thus (partly) studied under Van Witveld should be considered. For the time being, however, there is no evidence for this hypothesis, in part because no work by Van Witveld has come down to us (see also endnote 4 of this biography).

Page 4 of 5 8. The marriage certificate of Quiringh van Brekelenkam and Elisabeth de Beaumont calls Elisabeth the widow of Willem Simons van Noortwyck. In the certificate of 1643 relating to Elisabeth s marriage to Willem, however, is listed a Willem Symons Romeijn from Noordwijk. In this document Elisabeth van Beaumont is called Elisabeth Garbrants and her mother Annetje Thomas. The Leiden marriage registers list only one Garbrant who married an Annetje Thomas, namely Garbrant Auckes of Dokkum, a cobbler. He married the Danish Annetje Thomas in Leiden in 1612. While they might be Elisabeth van Beaumont s parents, this is not certain, because in various documents Elisabeth is mentioned with the patronymic Willems. No Willem van Beaumont is found in the Leiden death, marriage, or baptism registers. 9. From 1657 to 1665 there is no mention of a child. During this time a son, Willem van Brekelenkam, was probably born. He was a cobbler, mentioned in a few notarial documents. See, for example, RAL NA not. D. de Fries, inv. 1230, docs. 72 and 103 (1679). In another document he is called the neef (nephew/cousin) of Albert Eysing, the husband of Aeltje van Brekelenkam, Quiringh s sister. However, since Quiringh did not have a brother, Willem must have been his son. 10. Angelika Lasius, Quiringh van Brekelenkam (Doornspijk, 1992), 9. 11. Angelika Lasius, Quiringh van Brekelenkam (Doornspijk, 1992), n. 7. 12. Hadde [Van Brekelenkam] een swaar huijshouden met kinderen en meest sober teeren, tgeen oorzaak is geweest dat veele slegte stukjes van hem inde wereld zijn gekomen, die hij maar schielijk afgeroffeld heeft om maar geld in handen te krijgen. Het ongeluk van verscheide Schilders uit t School van Douw ist geweest, dat er in hunne tijd zo veele grote bazen in de kunst als hun meester [Dou], Frans van Mieris en anderen in wezen waren, en er dus niet veel om hen gedagt wierdt. Angelika Lasius, Quiringh van Brekelenkam (Doornspijk, 1992), 11. 13. Inventory of Pieter de Grient, innkeeper, and Catharina Verhaven (RAL Weeskamer, WK 1391d, 13 December 1656) and inventory of Henric Bugge van Ring and Aeltgen Henricxdr van Swieten (RAL NA not. L. van Swieten, 1005 [deed 10], 30 March 1667). Literature Bodkin, Th. Quiringh Brekelenkam s Master. The Burlington Magazine 44 (1924): 26 41. Lasius, Angelika. Quiringh van Brekelenkam. Ph.D. diss., University of Göttingen, 1987. Sluijter, Eric J. et al. Leidse fijnschilders: van Gerrit Dou tot Frans van Mieris de Jonge 1630 1760. Exh. cat. Leiden, Stedelijk Museum de Lakenhal. Zwolle, 1988.

Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org) Quiringh van Brekelenkam Page 5 of 5 Lasius, Angelika. Quiringh van Brekelenkam. Doornspijk, 1992. Köhler, Neeltje et al. Painting in Haarlem 1500 1850: The Collection of the Frans Hals Museum. Ghent and Haarlem, 2006, 263 64.