Dutch Graphic Tradition in the Hudson Valley
Transcription
Dutch Graphic Tradition in the Hudson Valley
raphic Tr ecovering the Independent Researcher and Consulltant Columbia County, NY I magesare very powerful. A good example is the com- depicts an imaginary landscapepeopled with curiously European-like Indians, and was probably based on a description of Coronado’s exploits in what is now the southwesternUnited States.It shows Indians acting in defense of themselves against Spanish conquest. Its theme-innocent, pastoral life corrupted by depraved civilization-proved to be as prophetic of American experience as it was readily recognized in the Low Countries where the Spanish then ruled.* Though a European product far removed from the arts of the colonial Dutch, the painting focusesour attention on the purposeful and effective graphic representationsfamiliar to the Dutch in both Europe and America. mon delight most people experienced in the film “Raiders of the Lost Ark.” The delight was remarkably heightened for sharp-eyed Hudson Valley Dutch historians. Their unanticipated thrill came when Harrison Ford pulled from a shelf of ancient tomes the familiar icon-a large, brass-comer-tipped and clasped, embossedleather volume, the Dutch Bible. Though fleeting, the thrill didn’t stop there. Ford, in the role of Indiana Jones,usedthis book to discover what the Lost Ark looked like-an act of research eerily reminiscent of one Van Bummell, described by Alexander Hamilton in 1744, who had used the same means to discover what the Tower of Babel looked like-by consulting its illustrations. Among pagesof the Book of Genesis,he found an exact depiction of the Ark. And the film’s producer and art director found the source for an elaborate film set, recreating for modern Americans an image that was a Hudson Valley commonplacetwo hundredand fifty yearsago.In thecontext of the film, the Bible image had one meaning and purpose-find the Ark. But that becameskewed for those acquainted with the Hudson Valley commonplace.The image evoked amazementand perhapsshock at seeinga Bible in such a context; it evoked feelings of superior knowledge, in the moment of recognition, over other moviegoers;it evoked wonder andcontemplation at how a Dutch Bible wended its way to a Hollywood set. In retrospect, the whole evokes bemusement:who would have expected “Raiders of the Lost Ark” to conjure solemn reflections. Images, lie the Lost Ark itself, becomeicons, symbols, and emblemsfilled with many ideas and networks of meaning. During the seventeenthcentury, graphic arts touched all parts of Dutch society and economy. Painted and printed pictures were usually familiar scenesand objects or depictions of historical, heroic, mythological, or biblical subjects.All of theseimages had a prominent place in daily life where the Dutch drew instruction and meaning from such illustrations. In addition, engravings, maps, and tiles were ornamented with graphic representations, and illustrated books enjoyed an enormous popularity. In particular, books of topical versesought to explain religious, biblical, and social issues. The verses were elaborated in accompanying illustrations that depicted the dramaticaction and moral of the verse.Suchpictorial and verbal instructions also enjoyed prevalence throughout Europe and in England where they were known as “emblems.” Emblematic verse had to be read for the accompanyingillustration to be comprehensible; but once the verse was read and the illustration understood, the illustration alone becamean emblem (or symbol) for the written idea. Our understanding of the association of graphic and verbal depiction is further enriched by the multiple meanings of the Dutch word verklaaren: “to illustrate”, and “to declare, explain, interpret.” Thus despite the Dutch abundance of book publishers and sellers and the prevalence of literacy, imagesremainedpotent symbols for conveying informa- Dutch graphic representationswere groundedin such associations.What is now regardedasthe earliest known Europeanpainting of the New World is Dutch and, like “Raiders of the Lost Ark,” contains surprising, unexpectedsymbolism. JanMostaert (1475-1555/6) of Haarlem painted West Indies landscape about 1542and Care1 van Mander first described it in 1604. The painting 23 24 SELECTED RENSSELAERSWIJCK SEMINAR tion and ideas in the Netherlands. Not limited to illustrated books, emblematic images were adaptedby painters to give layered meaningsto their paintings. The English diarist John Evelyn was amazedby these pictures-“especially landscapesand drolleries”-that he found for sale at the Rotterdamkermis. He also noted ornamental representationsadorning houses,churches, and furniture. Evelyn explained that ‘.. . . the reason for this store of pictures, and their cheapness, proceeds for their want of land to employ their stock, so that it is an ordinary thing to find a common farmer lay out two or three thousand pounds in this commodity. Their houses are $ll of them, and they vend them at their fairs to very great gains.” In the seventeenthcentury, more than three thousand documentedartists? found this demandirresistible, and only a handful of them travelled to far-flung Dutch outposts established by the Dutch East and West India Companies.Among the latter were six who came to the western hemisphere under the patronage of Count Johann Maurits, first governor of Brazil. During his administration (1637-44), he established scientists, craftsmen, scholars, and these six professional painters to study and record the exotic country. Paintings and PAPERS drawings by Albert E&out (ca. 161~after 1664) and Frans Jansz. Post (ca. 1612-1680), ishowing the landscape, vegetation, fruits, animal life, and native peoples,constitute the major Oeuvreof Dutch artists in the New World. The paintings were brought to the Netherlands when Count Maurits returned.4 Official Dutch interest in the arts in the Americas thus ceased. No graphic recording of North American flora, fauna, or landscapehad ever beencommissioned by the Dutch West India Company or its local officials. However, several early Dutch mapmakers illustrated their maps with representationsof Indians, animals, vegetation, imagesof New Amsterdam,and beaverswere incorporated into civic coats-of-arms. Two early drawings by unknown delineators show New Amsterdam’sappearance, and were adaptedby engravers to ornament their maps of New Netherland. The ca. 1650 view, first published by N. J. Vissche2 in 1651-55, was used to illustrate Adriaen van der Donck’s Description 4 The New Netherlands which also included a depiction of North American fauna that more resembled creatures from medieval bestiaries.6Jan Mostaert’s auspicious beginning in the sixteenth century seemedto dwindle asDutch contact with New World expandedin the 1’7thcentury. Fig. 3. Depiction of North American Fauna, from Adrian van der Donck’s Description of the New Netherlands. Courtesy of Manuscripts and Special Collections, New York StateLrbrary, Albany. THE DUTCH GRAPflIC Nonetheless,traditionally important attitudes and expectations pertaining to graphic art were transplantedto America, and, taking root in a provincial situation, became greatly modified and eventually reshaped by some unexpected influences. Today only a handful of surviving examplesprovide concrete information about seventeenthcentury graphic production in New Netherland. The surviving artifacts are significandy dominated by iconographic images, leading to the impression that graphic arts in New Netherland quietly emerged in relationship to some predisposition or need for emblematiccontent andin proportion to craftsmenavailable. Manuscript evidence enlargesthis picture. Several examplesare worth considering. A portrait of Cornelis Steenwyck (ca. 1668) is ornamented with iconography pertinent to this man’s life. Arriving in New Amsterdam in 1651, Steenwyck rose to prominencein tradeandcivic offices. His portrait is dominated by the Steenwyckcoat of armsat the center top and under the bust-length figure a representationof New Amsterdam, taken from the ca. 1650 view of the town shortly thereafterpublished by Visscher.7 Heraldic devices held significance for New Netherlanders. As early as the 1630~~coats-of-armsfor New Netherland and New Amsterdam were planned.” Their most notable device, the beaver,aptly reflected the West India Company’s North American trading purposes. Some individuals brought with them from Europe their family’s coats-of-arms.Apparently some devices were adoptedhere after a family gained colonial prominence. After the English takeover in 1664, interest in such devices seems to have increased during the colonial period, and was renewed by descendants in the nineteenth century. Arms were employed in notably public fashion: at Albany (1656 and after) and Kingston (1679), the Dutch churches were furnished with glass decoratedby Evert Duyckinck (ca. %620/l-by 1702/3), a glazier who immigrated to Netherland by 1640.’ The church windows were commissioned and paid for by prominent individuals whose family coats-of-arms adorned the glass, while canvas hatchments bearing painted armsof even more families hung in the churches and were carried at funerals, following customs of the Netherlands. Their prominent display conferred status and compelled recognition of the more prosperous membersof the community. In the eighteenth century, coats-of-arms came to be a frequent decoration (and declaration of ownership) on silver pieces. TRADITION IN THE HUDSON VALLEY 25 An example of seventeenth century silver work-a presentationbeakerthat descendedin the Sandersfamily of Scotia, New York-shows bsw the emblematic verklaaring elucidated values and information. The was ornamented with adaptations of emblems ti in Spiegel watt den.Olden ende Nieuwen Tgdt, (1632).” The §@ege1(Mirror) was a witty, moralistic, and sometimessatiric book by JacobCats.His useof folk wisdom combined with classical and IBiblical authorities made him widely popular and the most beloved poet of the seventeenthcentury. Editions of his poemswere well illustrated with humorousandsometimescryptic engravings that becamesymbols for the subject of the verses. Thus the imagesof stork, geese,and eagle with tortoise incised on the beaker communicate ideas. The tortoise, momentarily riding high over craggy mountains in the claws of an eagle, will fall in the end. Cats provided the English gloss, “The highest tree hath the greatestfall.” Cats’ geeserepresentindustry, for by labor are fortunes made. The image of the stork tells the story of a more complex illustration: armed soldiers pursuing farmers, who chasea dragon-like crocodile, which is about to eat a snake which is attacking a stork which eats a lizard which is eating a spider whoseweb hasensnaredinsects. To complete a cycle, it is likely the insectsare plaguing the soldiers. Cats provided a gloss from the Bible, Ecclesiastes5:8, If you witness in some province the oppression of the poor, do not be surprised at what goes on, for every official has a hi her one set over him and the highest keeps watch over them all. lf One can hardly ignore the verse that follows in the Bible. “The best thing for a country is a king whoseown lands are well tilled,” which fortifies the wry sacial and political observation certainly applicable to New York colonial administration in 1685, the year the beakerwas madeby Comelis van den Butch [Burgh]. These diverse examples, however, do not answer for paintings or other delineated art. Evidence of seventeenth century painters in New Netherland is minimal. Portraits of importance are Ehoseof Petrus Stuyvesant (1611-1672) and his son, William Nicholas Stuyvesant (B64CB698). Based om a itbw iimwhich a woman stated that her husband p amdhis two sonsin order 8663, that mam,HemriCouturier, is most likely to have beemtie painter who made these portraits. Despite the 1666 inscription on the surviving portrait of William Nicholas Stuyvesant rAetatis Sua I7 Ano I666”)-an inscription now attributed to Nehemiah Partridge-the Fig. 4. Silver presentationbeaker, 1685, by Cornelius van der Burch. From the Mable Brady Garvan Collection of the Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven. THE DUTCH GRAPHIC attractive theory that Hem-i Couturier painted these portraits is plausible because Couturier is the only schilder known to have lived in New Netherland/New York (ca. 1661-74) at that time and because of the realistic possibility that more than one portrait of these subjectsmight havebeenmade.Couturier mustbe noted as the colony’s first “artist” of record, even though knowledge of his work is very sparse.12 During this period, we know that a variety of art came to the colony from Europe.“Paperpictures” (engravings) are mentioned in a few inventories of the 1650s.Several slightly later inventories reveal that rich colonists had an array of paintings. One of these was Margarita van Varick (wife of Domine Rudolphus van Varick) whose stunning collection of paintings (including portraits) and works of art on paper must have been assembledduring her first marriage to a prosperousDutch EastIndia Company administrator.’ 3 But colonial circumstancesdid not always leave room for theseamenities.Jeremiasvan Rensselaer,who came to America in 1654, never mentioned works of art until about two months before his deathin 1674, when he wrote to his brother, Jan Baptist, about the settlementof his mother’s estatein the Netherlands: I wish that opposite each article had been indicated the price at which it was appraised, as I could then order some paintings to be sent over. The household linen you will please slyd to us, as we need that to replenish the linen closet somewhat. Other painters, however, are encountered in colony records as ship passengersand then in the listing of the Small Burgher Right. The register for the Small Burgher Right wasbegunApril 10,1657, andonly threedayslater JanDirckzsen, painter, andEvert Duyckinck (a “glazier” of specialinterest,aswe will scebelow) took therequired oath andpaid 18stivers to retain certain privileges of city residency. In May 1659, another painter, Jacob Hendricksen Haen, was listed.15 Since they are not denotedas “limners,” it is likely that thesemen were not of a primarily artistic bent but rather skilled in preparing and applying pigments in oil for practical and perhaps decorative purposes. By the late seventeenthcentury we seem to reach a hiatus in the developmentof painting in the former Dutch colony. Several kinds of artisans created graphic emblematic images,while painters were known only for craft skills until about 1700and lone Hemi Couturier for only three documentedportraits. Nonetheless,the early eighteenth century portraiture was established in New TRADITION IN THE HUDSON VALLEY 27 York, although too few portraits are identified with certainty as to subject and date to speculateabout how extensive portraiture may have been in this period. A handful known from surviving examplesand mention of additional ones in inventories enable us to consider graphic arts in this period. One of the inventories seemsespecially significant. It is that of John Abeel (ca. 1669-171 l/2) who had in his Albany housein 17ll“ll painted pictures, 22 little do., and a painted picture of Mr. Abeel and of Mrs. Abeel and of the daughter.“16 Which of his young daughters, Catalina (b. 1698), Neeltje (b. 1701), or Jannetje (b. 1703),is not stated.But clearly here is indicated a group of family portraits like those associated with more numerous surviving examples of the 1718-50 period. None of these paintings are known today. However, within the family network revealedby Abeel’s inventory are found limners, portrait subjects,and evidence of the easewith which family alliancesbetwween New York and Albany were established. Abeel’s executors-his wife Catalina (Schuyler) Abeel, his brother-in-law limner Gerrit Duyckinck (166O-ca. 1712), and another brother-in-law Myndert Schuyler-appointed kinsmen and trusted friends to appraise household property at Albany and some silverware and a supply of linen kept in the New York house of Gerrit or Evert Duyckinck. These appraisers were Hendrick Hansen,Pieter van Brugh, and Evert Duyckinck (1677-ca 1726), the latter a limner and the third of that name, a grandson of Evert the glazier and nephew of the above mentioned Gerrit, who was the spouseof JohannesAbeel’s sister, Maria (ca. 1666-1738). Johannes Abeel served as baptismal sponsor for two of his sister’s children, including GerardusDuyckinck (16951746), a limner in the next generation. Adding to this density in the subsequentgeneration was the 1726marriage of Gerrit and Maria (Abeel) Duyckinck’s daughter, Maria (1702- ? ). to her first cousin David (1705- ?), youngestsonJohannesand Catalina (Schuyler) Abeel.17 Three generations of the Duyckinck family emerge from records and from a group of paintings long traditionally attributed to them as New York’s leading limners. There is even elusive documentation that the first Eve& the glazier, was a limner in later life. And in the fourth generation,GerardusDuyckinck (1723-1797),the eldest son of Gerardusand his wife Johannavan Brugh, continued the family involvement in graphic arts. Although he was enteredas a limner in the New York City 28 SELECTED RENSSELAERSWIJCKSEMINAR freeman register in 1748 and advertised that he taught drawing, would take portraits, and carried on his father’s well-stocked art and glasssupply shopat the “sign of the Cupid,” no works are attributed to him. Art historians now believe that he probably did not produce many paintings.” While the Oeuvreof this important family was long loosely defined, the 1976discovery by Richard H. Love of a scripture history painting signed “Gerardus Duyckinck/1713”t9 hasresultedin somefirmer attributions and new conclusions. Art historian Mary Black has pointed out that certain brown, blue, andvermillion pigmentsand a distinctive tulipwood panel are characteristicscommon over at leasttwo generationsof manypaintings attributed to the Duyckinck family. In fact, the recurrenceof these pigments andpanels suggesta family atelier in the Dock Ward of New York, where Evert and Gerrit lived next door to each other for a number of years. An unusually high quantity of glassfragmentswasfound in the Duyckinck cellar by archeologists in their excavation of the property at Hanover Squarein 1981.20The discovery of the signed scripture painting now enablesart historians to distinguish stylistic elements in the works of Ever-t Duyckinck (1677-1727) and his cousin Gemrdus(16951746)and to attribute the important portrait of Mrs. Elsje Rutgers Schuyler Vas, by long tradition ascribed to the hand of Hudson Valley portraitist, Pieter Vanderlyn, to GerardusDuyckinck. This woman was the step motherin-law of Pieter Vanderlyn and this family association supportedthe statementof Pieter’s grandson,artist John Vanderlyn that he portrait had been made by his grandfather. However, Mrs. Vas had been married first to David Schuyler (1669-17 15)and wasthereforeaclose kinswoman to the Abe&Duyckinck family. All three of her sons, David Jr, Hermanus, and Myndert Schuyler, appear to have engaged in the painter’s business and were enteredin the freeman’sregister aspainters (which probably meansonly that they madepaints) and retained associationswith the Duyckinck family. Gerardus Duyckinck’s scripture history painting, madewhen he waseighteen yearsold, hasimportance in its own right. It is the only signed colonial New York painting. The import of its subjectmatter is not perfectly clear, but offers an opportunity to demonstrateuse of iconographic detail. Based upon the personnae depicted-notably an elderly father and a new, young mother in childbed and the company of female friends caring for an infant-and the subsequentdiscovery of a colonial Latin American painting with the same PAPERS composition entitled The Birth of the Virgin, Richard Love identified this painting as the same subject. However, specific details-mission of bathing the newborn infant and the inclusion of the”father” who had no role in Mary’s Immaculate Conception-that run counter to fixed European depictions of this subject, the strong anti-Catholic position of the Dutch, along with their occasionalpredilection for the nameJan-Baptistled Piwonka and Blackbum to identify the subject depicted as The Naming of John the Baptist.2’ They could not account, however, for the omission of the writing tablet on which aging Zachariah wrote “His name is John,” an important detail common to Europeanrepresentationsof that subject. These argumentsare somewhat trivialized by the omission of critical iconographic detail in some other early New York scripture history paintings (such as the failure to depict the furry skins put on Jacob’s hands,soblind father would believe he was touching the hairy Esau).22Lutherans and perhaps former Catholics at Albany did have an interest in Marianism, but it took the form of quarrelsomeopposition, basedon the content of the Bible, to Lutheran minister Domine Bemardus Arenzius’ teaching that Mary had died a virgin.23 The religious narrative of this painting directs us back to emblematic depiction and to the observation that the work of the Duyckinck family constituted the continuity of verklaaring in the province. Although requisite iconographic detail is mishandled in some of the paintings, all of thepaintings, savethe curious exampleabove, canbe readily identified (sometimesbecausethe Biblical reference is inscribed) with subjects in the Bible, and most are close adaptationsof engraved illustrations that occur in the illustrated Dutch Bibles and other illustrated books prevalent in America between 1698 and about 1755.One of thesepaintings, now attributed to Gerardus Duyckinck, is virtually an iconographic study. The depiction of The Four Evangelists includes not only Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John but their respective emblems-a winged man, a winged lion, a winged ox, and an eagle.Although details of the figures and animals derive from printed sources,no specific source for this composition has been found in the Bible or in other printed illustrations. More than thirty-five scripture history paintings from the first half of the eighteenth century smvive. Most of them originated in the upper Hudson and Mohawk Valleys, a region where contemporary sojournersnoted their greatpopuhuity.24 The Dutch were well acquainted with Bible stories and perpetuatedthis knowledge with THE DUTCH GRAPHIC Bible instruction for their children. Dutch Bible illustrations and numerousreligious subjectsdepictedon hearth tiles reinforced the instruction. The Old World habit of equating their own personal provincial histories and destinies with events narrated in the Bible remained in tact well past the middle of the eighteenth century.25 Besides serving as emblematic teachers of Bible history, the scripture paintings also reinforced experienceand aspirations. While one extant New York scripture painting, The Crowning of Jeroboam, is a highly political comment,26 the remainder illustrate occasionally religious experience and most often episodesand experience of family life. Birth, nurturing, generational and sibling conflict, hospitality, comradeship, feasting, and domestic peace were concerns commonly shared in frontier and provincial communities. Portraits dating from the long and peaceful period between the French and Indian wars (1713-1744) dominated eighteenth century New York colonial art. The greatest proportion of surviving examples come from the upper Hudson and Mohawk Valleys, although we cannot conclude that theseexamplesare an accurate reflection of the proportions of portraits originally made for patronsin New York, Albany, andthe greatrural river valleys. Most of the subjects can be identified as membersof local patriciates. These individuals, of the second and third generation in Albany county, had achieved a degree of economic stability and become contributors to local civic life. Only a handful of portrait subjects are of the proportionately smaller upper class that lived in the region. Somesurviving examplesshow that entire families were portrayed as individuals on separate canvases. Because of some documentary evidenceandthe many child portraits, it is concludedthat this custom of recording likenessesof the whole family was probably more prevalent than surviving paintings show.27 Certainly peace in the colonies contributed to the impressivequantity of art producedin the HudsonValley between 1718 and about 1744.But this was not the only factor. Wartime andNew York political turbulenceof the preceding decadesmay have paved the way for new painters in the colony. The few Albany portraits attributable to the Duyckincks are surprising, especially when their strong family and long businessassociations in the Albany areaare considered.Although it is conjectural, the Duyckinck’s close Leislerian ties in the 1690s TRADITION Ii’d THE HUDSON VALLEY 29 may have roused Albanians to boycott their work. It is otherwise difficult to accountfor the short-fall of Albany subjectsby theDuyckinck family painters.With growing population, an established society, and a stabilized economy for the first time since settlement, colonists were in a position to expand their cultural horizons. A combination of available painters and eagerpatronswas equally important. While retaining some iconographic elementsrelated to emblems,New York patrons turned to artisansof British background. The first of thesewas John Watson, a Scats immigrant and accomplished painter who settledin New Jerseyin 1714.28Most of his subjects appear to have been from the lower Hudson region, andhis Albany subjectswere from the city’s most prominent families. It was Nehemiah Partridge (1683-by 1737), a New England-born limner and artificer who migrated from Boston to New York city by January 1717F9who found the most receptive patronagein old Albany county. His identity has only recently been ascertained by Mary Black, who has found that he is likely to have had contacts with Albanians long before 1718, when he apparently first went to the town, for members of his prominent New Portsmouth family were among New Englanders who had worked with Albanians during the French and Indian wars. During 1718-1721 and about 1724-1725, Partridge limned images of more than fifty Albany subjects.Their direct, honestly depicted heads are often set in a somewhat pretentious, English-influenced atmospherecopied from current, fashionable mezzotints.Frequently aLatin inscription, giving the age of the subjectand the year the portrait was made,appears on the paintings, causingtwentieth century art historians to have called Partridge the Aetatis SueLimner.30 This former “title” of the previously anonymous limner focuses on an important iconographic detail. Aetatis sueinscriptions on portraits, a northern European and English custom that began in the fifteenth century, are closely related to the historic emergence of both individuals and the modem family, for recognition of an individual’s age was an important factor in placing that individual in society. By the middle of the seventeenth century this custom of inscribing portraits was unfashionable,unsophisticated,andconsideredin town and court as “naive and provincialyy3’ Its late appearance among the colonial Dutch-first with William Nicholas Stuyvesant’s 1666 portrait, and then on numerous Albany portraits in the first and secondquarters of the eighteenth century-is historically consistent with 30 SELECTED RENSSELAERSWIJCKSEMINARPAPERS patternsof family formation and the emergenceof town society, and is symptomatic of a provincial self-conception. Related to this development is the fact that the Albany community, which had maintained no recordsof marriagesand births, respondedenergetically when the English (who by this time had established their own national procedures)required this in 1683.This ritual of family life found expressionnot only in church ceremony and records but also in individual family histories kept in Bibles or ledgers. After Partridge’s sojourns at Albany, the Aetatis Sue formula diminished in use, although a number of examples by Pieter Vanderlyn and by John Heaten are found on portraits of the 1730sand early 1740s.Thesetwo limners addedsubstantially to the quantity of upper Hudson Valley portraits and in a number of their works, emblematic or other symbolic iconography was used. Pieter Vanderlyn (ca. 1687-1778) was a Dutch-born painter who settled in New York about 1718 after a period in Dutch-occupied CuraGao. Because of the prominence of his grandson, John Vanderlyn, he is a colonial limner whose name was never lost and cameto beassociatedwith too manyportraits in stylestoo diverse to be credited to one hand.32 In his work, several examples of emblem-like details are found. The best example are the paired portraits of Leendert Gansevoort (1683-1763)andhiswifeCatarinadeWandelaer(16891767). The couple’s surname, Gansevoort, means “goose-fort,” a fact handsomely illustrated by a goose pond embellishing Leendert’s portrait and a castle fortification in Catarina’s portrait. Another kind of symbolism frequently employed by Vanderlyn was inclusion of floral and bird images in portraits of children and young people. Roses and gillyflowers, most commonly held by young females, were traditionally symbolic of pure love, love about to happen,romantic love, and soon, according to their color and the position in which they are held. Similar devices are seen in portraits by Partridge, where they seem to follow the influence of English mezzotints rather than contain symbolic content. Even in Vanderlyn’s paintings, their ornamentaleffect is indisputable. However, a particular feature of one portrait causesus to reconsider their possible significance. The portrait is of Magdalena Veeder, whose left hand holds low on the canvas a full-blown rose and whose raised right hand holds buds in the air; falling behind the painted spandrel, at the bottom of the portrait, in almost trompe d’oeille manner, are an open rose, a peach, and a cherry. Our lack of specific knowledge of floral and fruit symbolism obscuresany story that this interesting and remarkable configuration of elementsmay have told. Despite Vanderlyn’s Dutch origin’s, there is little in his painting that derives from the rich, sophisticated seventeenth century portraiture of the Netherlands. Besidestherebusand floral devices,he also usedin some portraits archaic elements of sixteenth century English and other northern European portraiture.33 In this Mannerist-influenced tradition, stiff ritualized figures are garbed in highly ornamental costumes, and their personor backgrounddetail (whether landscapeor merely undefined) are further characterized with personally identifying, specific iconographic detail, suchasa building, an object, jewelry, a pet, written inscription, etc. Suchportraits-especially thoseof female subjects-are extremely decorative but also are illustrated statements (like verklaaring) giving definition to individuals. Two examples of this tradition in Vanderlyn’s work are portraits of Debora Glen (1721-1786) and Susanna Truax (17261805). This kind of portraiture was not the currently fashionable type disseminated by imported mezzotints. What example or circumstance existed that influenced Vanderlyn or called this tradition to the attention of Albany/ Schenectady area patrons is now unknown. However, the appeal of these highly iconographic depictions conforms with the graphic orientation of the provincial Dutch community. The Wendell limner, named for his depiction of more Wendell family subjectsin the 173Os,is another painter who worked in Albany and whose portraits sometimes incorporate this archaic tradition. He is likely John Heaten,also namedin the informative Wendell account book. Evert Wendells’s son, Abraham, wrote in 1737 in the same ledger that contained the information about Nehemiah Partridge, that he had sent Heaten seven framesand speckledlinen for the sevenportraits he had ordered.34More information is neededabout the identity of John Heaten,assuredlyof British andpossibly of New England origin, who appearsfirst in Albany records in 1730when he married Maria Hoogekerk (b. 1698). Over the following decade,he bought property and raised his family of four children in Albany, but in the early 1740s mention of him in public records ceases.His portrait of AbrahamWendell with the family mill in the.background also employs a specific local icon. The quantity of surviving portraits from the first half of the eighteenth century greatly exceeds the scripture THE DUTCH GRAPHIC paintings. It is supposed that this is so because later generationsidentified with their ancestorsand cared to preservetheir images,while the onceimportant scripture paintings appearedcrude, unfashionable, and no longer communicatedmeaningful ideas. If an emblematic response operated at all in later generations,it must have reactedto the portraits’ strong individualism andtheir ability to communicatea familial continuity, inspiring pride and probably veneration. Janet Montgomery, reminiscing about her ancestry in 1820, recalled the great portrait by Nehemiah Partridge of Pieter Schuyler, who maintained such good relations with northern Indians and took four of them to the English court in 1710. In turn the Indians remembered Schuyler: TRADITION IN THE HUDSON VALLEY 31 His memory is still cherished. and even in my youth [ca. 1764 I have seen numbers crowd to see a full-length portrait of him. The moment they approached it they fell on their knees, calling out “Quidor! Quidor!” never being able to pronounce his name.35 Numerous paintings from Albany County during the first half of the eighteenth century were dominated by English influences and elements, but also retained an important Dutch characteristic. Along with fulfilling impulsesand needsfor self-perpetuationand decoration, paintings made for the Hudson Valley Dutch were consistent with the tradition of graphic literacy and the direct and emblematic illustration that the Dutch had brought to America in the seventeenth century. Verklaaren-illustration and statement-instructs us even today. Just ask Indiana Jones! 32 SELECTED RENSSELAERSWIJCK SEMINAR PAPERS Notes ‘Hugh Honour, The European Vision of America Cleveland: The Cleveland Art Museum, 1976), 30-32. 1John Evelyn, The Diary of John Evelyn (London: Dent, 1966) 21-22. 3Walther Bemdt, The Netherlandish Painters of the Seventeenth Century (New York: Phaidon, 1969),vol. 1, iv. 4Honour, 99-107. 51.N. Phelps Stokes and Daniel C. Haskell, American Historical Prints. Earl Views of American Cities. Etc. From the Phelps Stokes ana’ other Collections (New York: The New York Public Library, 1932),Plates4,5, 6 and 7; p. 9-l 1. 6Adriaen van der Donck, A Description of New Netherlands. Jeremiah Johnson, tr., and Thomas F. O’Donell, ed. (Syracuse: SyracuseUniversity Press, 1968), frontispiece and opp. iv of the translator’s introduction. 7The New-York Historical Society, Catalogue of American Portraits in The New-York Historical Society. 2 ~01s.(New York: The New-York Historical Society, 1974), 2: 757. Family tradition has ascribed the portrait to Steenwyck’s brother-in-law Jan van Gootten and it is said to havebeenpainted in the Netherlandswhen Steenwyck visited there in 1667-68; however, no information on the artist van Gooten hascometo light, andattribution to Henri Couturier can be considered. *Richard Koke, American Landscape and Painting in The New-York Historical Society. A Catalogue of the Collection. Including Historical. Narrative. and Marine Art. 3 ~01s. (New York: The New-York Historical Society, 1982), 3: 354-55. ‘Waldron Phoenix Belknap, American Colonial Painting. Materials for a History (Cambridge: The Belknap Press of Harvard University, 1959), 63-75, provides detailed information on the first Evert Duyckinck drawn from contemporary records.Seealso Robert W. G. Vail, “Storied Window Richly Dight” (New-York Historical Society Quarterly. 1952) 36: 148-59. “Anna W. McNeil, “A Pedigreed American Beaker” (The Magazine Antiques. May 1929) 15: 388-90 and Mrs. Russell Hastings, “The Sanders-Garvanbeakerby Cornelis VanderBurch” (The Magazine Antiques, February 1935) 27: 52-55. “Jacob Cats, Spiegel van den Ouden ende Nieuwen Tijdt, (1632. Reprint. Amsterdam: Facsimile Uitgaven Nederland N. V., 1968) Part 2: 19-20, Part 3: 21-22 and 27-28. ’ %‘herehasbeensomeconfusion over Stuy vesa t’s birth year due to the fact that his tombstone in St. IJ ark’s in the Bowery stateshe died in 1672at age 80. This implies 1592asthe year of his birth, and this dateis usedby some 19th and early 20th century historians (seeAlma R. van Hoevenberg, “The Stuyvesants in the Netherlands and New Netherland,” New-York Historical Society Quarterly Bulletin, x/l (April 1926): 3-;!7). However, more recent research in Netherlands archives have turned up proof that he was born in 1611 in Peperganear Scherpenzeelin the province of Friesland. See J.H.P. Kemperink, “Pieter Stuyvesant: Waar en wanneer werd Archief hij geboren?” De Navorscher-Nederlands XCVIII (1959): 49-59. The New Netherland Project has recently discovered confirmation of the 1611date in the Amsterdam Notarial Records No. 1293/8 of Jan. 18, 1646,which gives PetrusStuyvesant’sageasof that date as about 35 years. Information on Couturier comesfrom The New-York Historical Society, Catalogue of American Portraits, 780 and 782-83. See also John Hill Morgan, Early American Painters. Illustrated in the Collections of The New-York Historical Society (New York, 1926), p. 21; and Charles X. Harris, “Henri Couturier: An Artist of New Netherland,” The New-York Historical Society Quarterly 11 (July, 1927): 45-52; and James Thomas Flexner, First Flowers of Our Wilderness (New York: Dover Publications, 1968),57 and289-90. Couturier has also been suggested as the painter of the portrait of Comelis Steenwyck, mentioned earlier in this paper. 131nventoryof Margritavan Varick, 13Jan 1696/7,New York State Archives, Albany. Another example in the same collection is that of Christina Cappoens, 5 Jan 1693/4. “Pictures” and their frames are mentioned in numerous other inventories, but very few others name subject matter. 14A.J.F. van Laer, tr. and ed., Correspondence of Jeremias van Rensselaer 1651-167’4 (Albany: The University of the StateofNew York, 1932), 472. “The New-York Historical Society, [Burghers and Freemen] Collections of the New-York Historical Societyfor the Year I885 (New York, 1886), 17,21, and 25. *&‘A True Inventory of Goodsof thepersonEstateof Mr. John Abeel late of the City of Albany. . .7th April 1712” ew York StateArchives, Albany). P7Belknap,American Colonial Painting, U-85,107-9, 126, and 134-36; and Jonathan Pearson,Contributions for the Genealogies of the First Settlers of the Ancient CountyofAlbanyfrom 1630 to 1800 (Reprint. Baltimore: GenealogicalPublishing Co., Inc., 1976), 13.This some- THE DUTCH GRAPHIC what labored genealogicalknot is typical of relationships encounteredwhen studying groups of portraits, the kind of graphic image mostprevalent betweenabout 1718and 1750. Although not all subjectsare so closely related to a painter, evenbaptismal sponsorshipmay prove the key in establishing that the artist and the subject actually knew each other. Beyond this, substantial genealogical investigation is often required to confirm a portrait subject’s identity and the descentof an inherited portrait. “Belknap, American Colonial Painting, 120-23; and Wayne Craven, “Painting in New York City,” American Painting to 1776. Reappraisal (Winterthur Conference Report 1971), ed. Ian M. G. Quimby (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press,1971),252; 254-56. ‘?Richard H. Love, “ An Important Rediscovery: The Birth of the Virgin by Garardus Duyckinck I (16951746)” (Art News, November 1976) 75: 110-l 1. 2uNanRothschild, personalcommunication to author. 21RuthPiwonka and Roderic H. Blackburn. A remnant in the Wilderness: New York Dutch Scripture Hisrory Paintings of the Early Eighteenth Century (Albany and Annandale, New York: Albany Institute of History and Art for the Bard College Center, 1980), 22. 22Piwonkaand Blackburn, ibid., 4547. 23A.J.F. van Laer, Court Minutes of Albany, Rensselaerswyck, and Schenectady (Albany, The University of the Stateof New York, 1932) 3: 195-98. 2%wonka and Blackburn, A remnant in the Wilderness, 12, 25Albert Blankert et al, Gods, Saints, and Heroes. Dutch Painting in the Age of Rembrandt (Washington, Detroit, and Amsterdam: National Gallery of Art, The Detroit Institute of Arts, and Rijksmusem, 1980) is a scholarly exhibition catalogue with several essaysdevoted to the importance of religious, mythological and heroic painting in the Netherlands. While treating nothing like the colonial New York paintings, the didactic, moralistic function of seventeenthcentury Dutch examplesis well established.The customof copying from printed sources is clearly demonstratedby Adriaen van Gaesbeeck’sA Painter in his Studio, formerly at Chatsworth, Devonshire, now unlocated, but illustrated in Walther Berndt, 1: 402. 26Christine SkeelesSchloss, “The Dutch Prototype for The Crowning of Jeroboam: Politics and the Scriptures,” in Piwonka and Blackbum, A remnant in the Wilderness, 69-70, discusses possible relationships between the theme of “a successfultraitor crowned” and the usurpation of the Dutch territory by the English. The Leisler rebellion, church debates over pietism and over American ordination (Jeroboamhad establishedplaces of worship in the wilderness for the ten unfaithful tribes of Israel), or some other now unidentified issue. The painting is closely adaptedfrom an illustrated book by Nicholas Visscher (1659, 1700, and 1734 editions) of TRADITION IN THE HUDSON VALLEY 33 glosses and emblematic interpretation of Biblical history. “The Thomas van Alstyne family portraits are a good example of this. His will (NYHS Will Abstracts) mentions only that his three sons would have their own respective portraits. The will indicates that his two daughters would divide household property. The portraits of the three sonsare today unknown, and three portraits not mentionedin the will are in museumcollection+Thomas and his wife at New-York Historical Society, and daughter Catharine at Albany Institute of History and Art. 28Mary Black, “Tracking Down John Watson” American Arts & Antiques, October, 1979), 78-85. 19New-York Historical Society Collections 1909: Indenture of Apprentices 1718-1727,122. 3%Iary Black, “Co ntributions toward a History of Early Eighteenth-Century New York Portraiture: Identification of the Aetatis Suae and Wendell Limners.” American Art Yournal 12, (Autumn, 1980): 4-31. Documentary information about Partridge had been known for some time. Mrs. Black has added to that information significant biographical dataaboutPartridge and in particular haspositively associatedthe man with his work through her discovery of a 1718 entry in a Wendell family accountledger that describedPartridge’s “debt” of four portraits and somecash to Evert Wendell in exchange for a horse. Three of those dated portraits are today in the Albany Institute of History and Art collections. 3‘Philippe Aries, Centuries of Childhood. A Social History of Family Life, Robert Baldick, tr. (New York VintageBooks,Random House, 1962), 15-18;andKeith Wrightson, English Society 1580-1680 (New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press, 1982), Chs. 3 and 4. 32Charles%. Harris, “Pieter Vanderlyn, Portrait Painter” (Mew-York Historical Society Quarterly, 5 (October, 1921): 59-73. This seminal work brought forth important biographical dataaboutVanderlyn, but createdlonglasting confusion with his listing of all upper Hudson colonial portraits known to him and the indiscriminate attribution of all to Pieter Vanderlyn. Mary Black identified specific stylistic characteristic of the painter and made a checklist of works attributable to him in “The Gansevoort Limner,” The Magazine Antiques, 96 (1969): 738-744. A manuscript in SenateHouse colleetions, Kingston, in Vanderlyn’s handis relatedto inscriptions on portraits now attributed to him. The finding is discussedby Black in “Limners of the Upper Hudson Valley,” American Painting to 1776. A Reappraisal. Winterthur Conference Report 1971. (Charlottesville: The University Pressof Virginia, 1971), 23444. Harris and others should have been guided by traditional attributions to Vanderlyn claimed by Kingston portrait 34 SELECTED RENSSELAERSWIJCK SEMINAR owners, who had inherited the right information along with their portraits. 33Eric Mercer, English Art 1553-1625 (Oxford: The Clarendon Press, 1962), 145-216; and Roy Strong, The English Icon: Elizabethan&Jacobean Portraiture (London: The Paul Mellon Foundation for British Art, 1969). PAPERS 34MaryBlack, “Contributions toward a History of Early Eighteenth-Century New York Portraiture: Identification of the Aetatis Suae and Wendell Limners.” American Art Journal 12, (Autumn, 1980): 3 1. 35Janet Montgomery, “Reminiscens~es,” Dutchess County Historical Society Yearbook 1930,15: 56-57.