A popular and influential teacher, the Utrecht painter Abraham Bloemaert (c. 1565–1651) was the son of a sculptor and the father of four painters and printmakers.(1) According to van Mander, Bloemaert claimed that he had suffered as a boy under the direction of incompetent masters, an experience he often recalled to his own students.(2) Along with Paulus Moreelse, he established an academy of art in his native city, contributing greatly to its reputation as one of the most thriving artistic centers of the Dutch seventeenth century. His pupils included such major painters as Gerrit von Honthorst and Hendrick ter Brugghen. This may account in part for the importance teaching played in his own career. Drawing played a major role in Abraham’s busy studio, not only as preparation for paintings or prints but also as a teaching aid, a necessity in a large workshop where students learned to emulate the master’s style by copying his work. In 1650, working in collaboration with his son Frederick, Bloemaert published the Tekenboek, a collection of Abraham’s designs intended for students to copy as they learned to draw.(3)
Bloemaert disseminated his style not only through his many pupils but also via the hundreds of prints for which he provided designs.(4) The present landscape was reproduced in an etching by his son Frederick (c. 1616–1690), as part of a series of fifteen large landscapes.(5) By far the most prolific of the printmakers reproducing Abraham’s work, Frederick was particularly successful at evoking his father’s light, calligraphic touch of the pen with etched lines, which he sometimes supplemented with chiaroscuro woodcut. As is the case with other drawings Frederick etched for this series, including examples in Washington, London, and Windsor, the Crocker drawing is incised with a stylus for transfer.(6)
Long regarded as the work of Abraham Bloemaert himself, these modelli have more recently been attributed to Frederick.(7) The younger artist drew upon the vast supply of his father’s sketches, combining or adapting them using Abraham’s style of draughtsmanship, which he would have learned thoroughly. A black chalk sketch by Abraham now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, for instance, provided the panoramic landscape of hills or dunes in the background of the present drawing.(8) Abraham made hundreds of these sketches of landscape motifs, often from life, as described by van Mander.(9) Frederick apparently adapted motifs from Abraham’s sketches for other prints in the series, and his tidier style of draughtsmanship is demonstrated by a comparison of a drawing in Windsor with the looser, more painterly quality of Abraham’s original sketch.(10)
Despite his close collaboration with his father on such projects as the Tekenboek, Frederick remains a shadowy figure, and little is known about his life or artistic style: his many prints are undated, he left no signed drawings, and he appears to have devoted his entire career to reproducing or elaborating upon his father’s designs.(11) Drawings have in the past been tentatively assigned to Frederick, such as the modelli for the Tekenboek.(12) Like the engravers’ models for the Large Landscape series, these drawings both copy and elaborate upon Abraham’s motifs. With the publication of Jaap Bolten’s catalogue raisonné of Abraham’s drawings and the re-examination of the models for Frederick’s prints, the son’s role in his father’s workshop is likely to come into clearer focus.
Stacey Sell, in William Breazeale, with Cara Denison, Stacey Sell, and Freyda Spira, A Pioneering Collection: Master Drawings from the Crocker Art Museum, exh. cat. Sacramento and tour, 2010
Notes:
(1) For Bloemaert’s biography and the careers of his sons, see Marcel Roethlisberger and Marten Jan Bok, Abraham Bloemaert and his Sons, Paintings and Prints, Ghent, 1993.
(2) Karel van Mander, The Lives of the Illustrious Netherlandish and German Painters, from the first edition of the Schilder-boeck 1616-1618, intro. and trans. Hessel Miedema, Doornspijk, 1994, fol. 297r-297v.
(3) Jaap Bolten, “Abraham Bloemaert (1564–1651) and his Tekenboek,” in Delineavit et Sculpsit, vol. IX, 1993, pp. 1-10.
(4) Although there are approximately six hundred prints after Bloemaert’s designs, the artist made only one etching himself, Juno (Hollstein 4).
(5) Roethlisberger and Bok 1993 as in note 1 above, nos. 463-477; Hollstein 279-293.
(6) The back of the drawing is blackened, as is that of the Washington drawing (National Gallery of Art, 1978.81.1). See also British Museum no. SL, 5224.85 and, for the example at Windsor, Christopher White and Charlotte Crawley, The Dutch and Flemish Drawings of the Fifteenth to the early Nineteenth Centuries in the Collection of Her Majesty the Queen at Windsor Castle, Cambridge, 1994, no. 312.
(7) Bolten 2007 as in Literature above, p. 479, and White and Crawley 1994 as in note 6 above, nos. 312 and 313. Although the modello in London has been published only as Abraham’s work (A.E. Popham, Dutch and Flemish Drawings of the XV and XVI Centuries, London, 1932, no. 13) the British Museum has changed the attribution to Frederick, on their website, citing Bolten. Confusingly, Bolten describes the Crocker drawing as “Frederick’s engraver’s model,” but elsewhere notes that only in the case of this print has a drawing by Abraham “been preserved that was actually used as an engraver’s model” (p. 479). Evidently he is referring to the Metropolitan Museum drawing, the only other drawing he lists in connection with this print, but this is very unclear.
(8) Bolten 2007 as in Literature above, p. 475.
(9) Van Mander 1994 as in note 2 above, fol. 298r, lists a wealth of such motifs displaying Bloemaert’s skills, ranging from peasants’ houses to “algae-covered waters.”
(10) White and Crawley 1994 as in note 6 above, p. 202. See also Bolten in Ger Luijten et al., Dawn of the Golden Age, Northern Netherlandish Art 1580–1620, exh. cat. Amsterdam, 1993, no. 319.
(11) For Frederick’s biography, see Roethlisberger and Bok 1993 as in note 1 above, pp. 527-528.
(12) Marcel George Roethlisberger, “Bloemaert’s Series of Genre Prints,” in Gazette des-Beaux-Arts, VIe sér., vol. CXIX, January, 1992, p. 30, note 41.
Inscriptions: verso, dark brown ink, lower left: 179-; verso, black chalk, lower left corner: 8-; verso, black chalk, center bottom margin: A Bloemaart; verso, graphite, lower right: 5; verso, dark brown ink, lower right corner: no. 326
Literature: William Breazeale, with Cara Denison, Stacey Sell, and Freyda Spira, A Pioneering Collection: Master Drawings from the Crocker Art Museum, exh. cat. Sacramento and tour, 2010, no. 25; Jaap Bolten, Abraham Bloemaert c. 1565–1651, the Drawings, n.p., 2007, under no. 1613; Thomas Le Claire, Master Drawings: Recent Acquisitions, a Review of the Years 1982–2002, vol. XIV, 2002, no. 4 (as Abraham Bloemaert)
Provenance: Nicolaas Nieuhoff; his sale, Philippe van der Schley, Hendrick de Winter and Jan Yver, Amsterdam, 14 April 1777, no. 145; private German collection; Thomas Le Claire, Hamburg, by 2002; Crocker Art Museum purchase, 2003