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Two Studies of a Young Woman and a Repetition of Her Face

Two Studies of a Young Woman and a Repetition of Her Face

Abraham Bloemaert (in circa 1595-1602)

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Specifications

Title Two Studies of a Young Woman and a Repetition of Her Face
Material and technique Red and black chalk, heightened with white, framing lines (with the pen in brown ink) of the reverse leaking through
Object type
Drawing > Two-dimensional object > Art object
Location This object is in storage
Dimensions Height 202 mm
Width 247 mm
Artists Draughtsman: Abraham Bloemaert
Accession number MB 336 recto (PK)
Credits Gift, 1925
Department Drawings & Prints
Acquisition date 1925
Creation date in circa 1595-1602
Signature none
Watermark none (vH, 9P)
Condition The sheet has in the past been framed under a acidic passe-partout with a smaller window, which has caused discoloration along the margins; the glue has left marks and has caused the old cadre in iron-gall ink to leak through from verso to recto
Inscriptions 'Bloemart' (recto and verso, bottom centre, in pencil, by a later hand), 'Bl' (verso, at upper right, in red chalk), ‘254’(?) corrected to ‘15’ (recto, at upper left, in pencil)
Mark none
Provenance Anonymous gift, 1925
Exhibitions Rotterdam 1952, no. 33; Brussels-Hamburg 1961, no. 6; Prague 1966, no. 34; Rotterdam-New York-Fort Worth-Cleveland 1990, no. 29; Florence 2000, no. 52; Paris/Rotterdam 2014, no. 107
Internal exhibitions Van Pisanello tot Cézanne (1992)
External exhibitions Bosch to Bloemaert. Early Netherlandish Drawings from the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen (2014)
Bosch to Bloemaert. Early Netherlandish Drawings (2017)
Research Show research Netherlandish Drawings of the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries
Literature Luijten/Meij 1990, no. 29; Bolten 2007, no. 1025 (recto), no. 1040 (verso); Agenda 2012, no. 24 (r+v)
Material
Object
Technique
Heightened with white > Drawing technique > Technique > Material and technique
Geographical origin The Netherlands > Western Europe > Europe

Entry catalogue Netherlandish Drawings of the 15th and 16th Centuries.

Author: Albert J. Elen

The same female model has been depicted twice, once (right) with her hair hanging loose and her right shoulder half bare, once (left) with her hair bound up under a cap and her right shoulder covered.1 She is looking away to the left in lost profile. This particular head can be connected to the print Sine Cerere et Baccho friget Venus, engraved around 1600 by Jan Saenredam after a design by Bloemaert, and issued by Jacques Razet in Amsterdam (ill. 1).2 Taking into account the reversed image, the figure of Ceres, standing at the right, is very similar to our study in the position of the torso, the way the head is turned away from the beholder, with two prominent strings of hair, one hanging down on her back along her spine, the other over her bare shoulder towards her left breast. Bloemaert made countless figure studies like these, both in the process of preparing details in compositions to be painted, as for later use, kept in his workshop portfolios. Originally the paper sheet was larger, judging from the discontinued figure at the right edge (and the one on the corresponding left edge of the reverse); it has been cropped up by a later owner (who preferred the present verso drawing over the one on the recto judging from the cadre around it) and is possibly part of a larger sheet with other studies. A similar double-sided sheet with various studies of heads and arms, likewise executed in red chalk with white heightenings, is in the Jean Bonna Collection.3 It is conceivable that sheets like these, now solitary and cropped, were once part of a drawing-book.4

It has been suggested that the studies on both sides are connected to The Baptism of Christ, a late painting by Bloemaert dated 1646,5 but this does not seem probable, as the three main figures in the foreground of that painting are actually rather close copies of figures in earlier paintings from 1602 and c. 1625-1630.6 Bolten considers the studies on the reverse as stylistically different from those on the recto side and dates them four decades later. This would mean that Bloemaert reused existing study sheets in his portfolios, adding more on the blank sides, which is not likely to have happened after such a long time. Actually, two of the verso studies are related to the earlier painting The Baptism of Christ from 1602 (the outstretched left leg at bottom centre and the lower leg at top centre), and the studies of a praying boy and that of a partly bare leg with extended shoe resemble details in the engraving The Annunciation to the Shepherds by Jan Saenredam, after a design by Bloemaert, dated 1599.7 The study of a male nude at bottom right is similar to the standing nude in the background of Bloemaert’s painting Moses Striking the Rock, dated 1596.8 It is therefore safe to assume that the drawings on both sides were done somewhere between 1595 and 1602.

Study sheets like this one are characteristic for Bloemaert’s working method, combining various studies, making optimal use of the available space, on both sides. Sometimes the studies on one page are all related to one painting project and specially made for that purpose.9 In most cases, they are not preparatory but unrelated studies as such. Bloemaert’s workshop stock included countless studies of human figures in all kinds of poses and settings, as well as individual parts of the body, such as heads, hands and legs, many of which were later engraved and published in the Tekenboek.10

[caption id="attachment_14234" width="800" align="alignleft"]fig. 1 Jan Saenredam after Abraham Bloemaert, Sine Cerere et Baccho friget Venus [Without Bacchus and Ceres Venus would frieze], c. 1600, inv. no. L 1965/14fig. 1 Jan Saenredam after Abraham Bloemaert, Sine Cerere et Baccho friget Venus [Without Bacchus and Ceres Venus would frieze], c. 1600, inv. no. L 1965/14[/caption]

Footnotes

1 Bolten (2007) considers the studies to be from two different models.

2 Roethlisberger 1993, vol 1, no. 59, vol 2, ill 107, ill; copy in Museum Boijmans van Beuningen, Rotterdam, inv. no. L 1965/144. This connection was not noted so far. Bolten only refers to a summary linear repetition of the second head in the so-called Cambridge Album (his no. and ill. 1186), engraved by Frederik Bloemaert and published in plate 20 in the 1740 edition of theTekenboek.

3 Bolten 2007, no. A23, dated c. 1595-1605; Stijn Alsteens a.o. (ed.), exhib. cat. Raphael to Renoir. Drawings from the Collection of Jean Bonna, New York (The Metropolitan Museum of Art) 2009, no. 45, col.ills.

4 Further study of the paper characteristics in the individual drawings may yield data supporting this theory.

5 Luijten in Luijten/Meij 1990, p. 89; Agenda 2012. Roethlisberger 1993, vol. 1, no. 561, vol. 2, ill. 750; sold at Christie’s, London, on 3 December 1997, lot 38, col.ill.

6 The Baptism of Christ and Predication of St John, resp., Roethlisberger 1993, vol. 1, nos. 62 and 447, vol. 2, ills. 111 and 750. The ‘borrowing’ from the earlier paintings was pointed out in the sale catalogue, see previous note.

7 Roethlisberger 1993, vol. 1, no. 51, vol. 2, ill. 91.

8 Roethlisberger 1993, vol. 1, no. 46, vol. 2, ills. 82 and 84.

9 Like the study sheet in the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, which is related to the Theagenes and Chariclea painting in the Mauritshuis, The Hague; Bolten 2007, no. 1129, ill. See the discussion in Elen 2011, p. 35, ill 22.

10 The two female heads were engraved by Frederik Bloemaert and included as plates 20 and 15 in the Tekenboek (edition 1740).

Show research Netherlandish Drawings of the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries
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Abraham Bloemaert

Gorinchem 1566 - Utrecht 1651

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