Cornelis Janssens van Ceulen

This is a Dutch name; the family name is van Ceulen, not Ceulen.
For Cornelius Jansen the Elder, see Cornelius Jansen (Bishop of Ghent). For Cornelius Jansen (Bishop of Ypres), see Cornelius Jansen.
Cornelis Janssens van Ceulen
Born 14 October 1593
London, England
Died 5 August 1661(1661-08-05) (aged 67)
Utrecht, Dutch Republic
Nationality English / Dutch / Flemish
Known for Portraiture
Spouse(s) Elizabeth Beke

Cornelis Janssens van Ceulen (Dutch: [kɔrˈneːlɪs ˈjɑnsəns vɑn ˈkøːlən]; also Cornelius Jonson van Ceulen, Cornelius Johnson, Cornelis Jansz. van Ceulen and many other variants)[1] (bapt. 14 October 1593 – bur. 5 August 1661) was an English painter of portraits of Dutch or Flemish parentage. He was active in England, at least from 1618 to 1643. He moved to Middelburg in the Netherlands in 1643. Between 1646 and 1652 he lived in Amsterdam, before settling in Utrecht, where he was buried.

Janssens painted many portraits of emerging new English gentry. His early portraits were panel paintings with "fictive" oval frames. His style varied considerably over his career, and he was able to assimilate new influences into his own style without any discordant effect. He was particularly accurate and detailed in depiction of clothing.

Family life

Janssens van Ceulen was born to Dutch or Flemish parents in London – his father had been a religious refugee from Antwerp,[2] and the family had originated in Cologne.[3] He was baptised at the Dutch Church at Austin Friars much used by the Netherlandish community in London.[4] He was the son of Johanna le Grand and Cornelius Johnson. He may have been trained in the Netherlands, possibly under Michiel Jansz. van Mierevelt.[5] He was certainly influenced by other artists from the Netherlands,[6] and his early works follow the design and mood of Dutch painters.[7]

He had returned to England by 1619 when he was a witness at the baptism of his nephew, Theodore Russell – Janssens' sister was married to Nicholas Russell of Bruges.[8] He was active in England, from then until 1643. In the 1620s, he lived and had his studio in Blackfriars, London, as did Anthony van Dyck and Peter Oliver;[9] it was within the boundaries of the City of London, but was a liberty and so avoided the monopoly in the City of members of the London painters' Guild.[10] He married Elizabeth Beke of Colchester on 16 July 1622 at the Dutch church in London.[11] Their son James (who presumably died young) was baptised on 30 September 1623 at St Anne's Church.[11] Another son Cornelius Janssens, junior who also became a painter, was baptised on 15 August 1634.[12]

Janssens wished to be regarded as an English gentleman, registering his pedigree with the College of Arms.[13] His arms were three gold parrots on a gold background, and had a crest of a silver Catherine wheel with two parrot wings behind it. Apparently winged crests are common in German heraldry which may show the arms previously used by the family.[14]

Janssens moved to Canterbury in the mid-1630s, living with Sir Arnold Braems, a Flemish merchant. Janssens continued to live in England until after the outbreak of the English Civil War, but in October 1643, apparently at the insistence of his wife, he moved to Middelburg, joining the Guild of St. Luke there.[15] He was given parliamentary permission to travel " ... and to cary with him such pictures and colours, bedding, household stuff, pewter, and brass as belongs to himself".[16] Between 1646 and 1652 he lived in Amsterdam, before settling in Utrecht, where he was buried.[17]

Portraiture

Portrait of Susanna Temple, Later Lady Lister (1620) – Google Art Project. This is one of a number of portraits of the Temple family painted by Janssens

Janssens' first dated work is 1617, and may be of a Dutch subject; 1619 marks the beginning of his English portraits, which were initially heads only, although he later painted full length and group portraits.[18]

For painting a portrait, Janssens liked to charge £5[19] compared with a more typical figure of 10s – 20s.[20] However, this was not as expensive as better known artists such as Van Dyck or Peter Lely.[21][22] Karen Hearn’s ODNB entry for Johnson notes that "in 1638 Sir Thomas Pelham of Halland House, Sussex, paid £4 for his portrait by Johnson" (referencing an account book among the Pelham family papers, BL, Add. MS 33145, fol. 107).

Elizabeth Campion (1614-1673), 1631.
Baron Capel and his Family, 1641. Capel was a leading Royalist, executed in 1649.

There are hundreds of portraits of the emerging new gentry by Janssens,[23] including Lady Rose MacDonnell of Antrim. "Johnson’s art was best suited to the relative intimacy of the bust length portrait in which, with a certain detachment, he captured the reticence of the English landed gentry and minor aristocracy".[24] One of his earliest surviving portraits is of Susanna Temple, grandmother of Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough (Tate). This portrait was subsequently engraved by Robert White towards the end of the seventeenth century. A copy of the engraving was among the prints owned by Samuel Pepys which subsequently passed to Magdalene College, Cambridge.[25]

His royal portraits include Charles I as well as Charles II and James II, painted as children, both of which are in the National Portrait Gallery (London). He collaborated with Gerard Houckgeest on a portrait of Charles I's wife, Queen Henrietta Maria.[26]

After his move to the Netherlands, he continued to produce portraits of English clients – both exiled Royalists, and clients still living in England.[27]

Patronage

During the first few years of his career, a network of patronage by five families enabled Janssens to establish his reputation as a painter on the national stage. These families were the Boothby family of London and Chingford, the Corbett family of Shropshire, the Leveson family of Shropshire and Staffordshire, the Temple family of Burton Dassett and Stowe, and the Lenthall family of Burford and Besselsleigh. These families were connected to each other by marriage.[28]

His patrons came from the gentry, but were not from the highest levels in society[2] and the identity of many of his sitters has been lost.[13] However, despite having only received a few commissions from the crown, in 1632, Janssens was appointed as a "his Majesty's servant in the quality of Picture drawer" by Charles I. This appointment was perhaps in connection with the arrival of Van Dyck and the departure from England of Daniel Mytens – Janssens may have been found a role as a back-up for van Dyck.[18]

Style

He has been described as "one of the most gifted and prolific portrait painters practising in England during the 1620s and 1630s".[29] Lionel Cust describes him as being "more accomplished" than Gheeraerts.[30] However, he has also been described as "a good painter, but unable to compete with the flair and superlative skills of van Dyck".[10]

A typical early work of 1626, Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon, also later a prominent Royalist.
Portrait of a Woman, 1655-56, Princeton University Art Museum

He was one of the few artists in England at this time who consistently signed and dated their work, except for his later full-lengths, which his clients may have hoped would be mistaken for more expensive Van Dycks. He may have been successful in this, as some full-length portraits attributed to van Dyck's workshop may well be by him.[18] In the early years, his standard way of signing portraits was the phrase "fecit C J", although the 1619 portrait entitled the Countess of Arundel (below) is signed Cornelius Johnson fecit and many later works also have a full signature.[31]

Janssens' early portraits were panel paintings with "fictive" oval frames – they appear to have a wooden or marble oval surround, but this is actually painted on to the panel. This "trompe l’oeil" effect was one of Janssens’ favourite devices in the early part of his career. "His figures are usually placed in front of dark, undefined backgrounds with focus on their faces and elaborate costumes that denote their social standing."[32] He also painted some portrait miniatures on copper.

His early works (for example the 1620 portrait of Sir Alexander Temple) were described by C. H. Collins Baker as "flat wooden and inanimate".[33] Within a year, he has made "an astonishing advance" and his modelling becomes full and "his temper established". His earliest three-quarter length work is a pair of portraits of Thomas Boothby and his wife painted in 1619 and sold by the Weiss Gallery in 1988.[34] Another three-quarter length portrait (of Lord Keeper Coventry) is dated 1623, and shows a certain lack of skill in dealing with the body, which is overcome in later works.[35]

In his portraits, the sitters head is often unexpectedly low. The eyes have enlarged, rounded irises and deep curved upper lids.[36]

The London Painters and Stainers company has a 1623/4 portrait of Clement Pargeter, William Peacock and Thomas Babb that may be by Janssens. If so, it is the earliest group portrait by him.[37]

His style was conservative[2] although it varies considerably over his career, and he was able to assimilate new influences into his own style without any discordant effect. He took from, in turn, Mytens, van Dyck, and William Dobson. His last Dutch portraits show a different style reflecting contemporary portraiture there.[17] However he also influenced other artists – both lesser lights as well as more accomplished artists such as van Dyck.[38] Following the Netherlandish tradition, he was particularly accurate and detailed in depiction of clothing.[2] As a result, his portraits are especially useful to costume historians.[39]

Technique

Janssens uses a number of techniques that taken together uniquely identify his studio during his early career.[40] These include the presence of both wet-in-wet and discreet layering; calculated variations in brushwork and the use of high quality (and expensive) pigments that survived aging well.

Janssens was consulted by Théodore de Mayerne on handling orpiment (a poisonous yellow pigment) and painted his portrait.[41][42] In addition to describing his usage of orpiment to de Mayerne, Janssens also told Daniel King his technique for draperies. For linen draperies he used "white and oker broken with bone black". For blue draperies, he first laid in "all the background folds and shadows ... neatly and perfectly finished" with "indico ground in drying oiland mixt w[i]th smalt and white". When this had dried, he painted over it a glaze of ultramarine and "fair white".[43]

Exhibitions, sales and ownership of his work in important collections

From the second half of the 17th century onwards, there were frequent art auctions in London and later in provincial cities . Janssens' work was regularly sold at these auctions – for example lot 150 at a sale of paintings at Exeter Exchange in the Strand, 3 April 1690.[44]

Karen Hearn, Honorary Professor at UCL, curated a display of Janssens' work which was held at the National Portrait Gallery from April to September 2015.[45] In July, 2016, the first large scale exhibition devoted solely to his work was held at the Weiss Gallery in London.[46]

His work can be found in the National Gallery, the Tate Gallery, The National Portrait Gallery, Royal Collection, the Scottish National Portrait Gallery, the Dulwich Picture Gallery, many UK provincial galleries and in private collections in stately homes in Britain.[47][48] Outside the UK, his work can be found in the Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens, the Museum Catharijneconvent in Utrecht and the Yale Center for British Art.[49] His Portrait of a Lady was part of the exhibition of Tudor and Stuart Fashion at the Queen's Gallery.

Janssens' name is attached to the Janssens portrait of William Shakespeare in the Folger Shakespeare Library.[50] This was painted around 1610 and has a long association with Shakespeare. It was altered to show a higher forehead. It is no longer believed to be by Janssens.

Name

The large number of variants of his name has led to some controversy over the correct form. Janssens himself must take some responsibility for this since he frequently changed his signature.[51] Hearn has argued that in his later years in the Netherlands, he added the words "van Ceulen" ("from Cologne") to his signature as a marketing technique to emphasize his foreign origins. He had previously added "Londines" (London) to his signature, but stopped using this form following the outbreak of the first Anglo-Dutch war in 1652.

Finberg says "I think I may take this opportunity to protest once again against the prevalent habit of calling this artist Janssens. In spite of Walpole's unfortunate remark that this is the correct form of the name, there is no excuse for using it. While in England the artist invariably spelt his name Cornelius Johnson, and when he left England he changed the form to Jonson. The usual form of his signature when the name is given in full is invariably, in all the pictures painted after 1643 which I have seen : ' Cornelius Jonson van Ceulen.' He appears never to have adopted the form of Janson, Jansen, or Janssens. But so long as auctioneers are born with an ingrained conviction that a foreign-looking name gives greater value to a picture than an English name, so long may we expect to find Cornelius Johnson or Jonson masquerading in catalogues as Cornelius Janssens."[52]

Some portraits

Notes

  1. The Getty Union List of Artist's Names lists over 50 variants, an exceptional number even for this period.
  2. 1 2 3 4 J Paul Getty Museum
  3. Waterhouse, 60
  4. Cooper, Tarnya (2012). Citizen Portrait. Yale University Press. p. 54.
  5. Hearn, Karen (2015). Cornelius Johnson. Paul Holberton publishing. p. 12
  6. Karen Hearn, Dynasties: Painting in Tudor and Jacobean England 1530–1630. (New York: Rizzoli, 1995. ISBN 0-8478-1940-X)
  7. Millar, Oliver (1972). The Age of Charles I. The Tate Gallery. p. 14.
  8. Edmond, M Limners and Picturemakers – New light on the lives of miniaturists and large-scale portrait-painters working in London in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries Walpole Society, volume 47, page 87
  9. Hearn, Karen, ed. (2009). Van Dyck in Britain. Tate Publishing. p. 153.
  10. 1 2 Kirby, Jo (1999) The Painter's Trade in the 17th Century, National Portrait Gallery Technical Bulletin 20
  11. 1 2 Lane Fine Art
  12. Edmond, M Limners and Picturemakers – New light on the lives of miniaturists and large-scale portrait-painters working in London in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries Walpole Society, volume 47, page 89
  13. 1 2 Finberg, Alexander J (1917). "Two Anonymous Portraits by Cornelius Johnson". Walpole Society. 6.
  14. Hearn, Karen, 2003, "The English Career of Cornelius Johnson" in Roding, Juliette Dutch and Flemish Artists in Britain 1550–1800, Primavera, page 116
  15. Cust, Lionel Dictionary of National Biography, 1885–1900, volume 29
  16. Tarkington, Booth (1939). Some Old Portraits: A Book About Art and Human Beings. p. 46.
  17. 1 2 Waterhouse, 61–2
  18. 1 2 3 Waterhouse, 62
  19. literally "five broad pieces of gold" – a broad piece was a hammered piece of gold worth twenty shillings (£1). Horace Walpole, Anecdotes of painters in England
  20. Cooper, Tarnya (2012). Citizen Portrait. Yale University Press. p. 58.
  21. Brotton, Jerry (2007). The Sale of the Late King's Goods. Pan. p. 160.
  22. Prices are discussed by Ellis Waterhouse in Painting in Britain: 1530–1790
  23. Chivers, Ian, ed. (2004). Oxford Dictionary of Art (third ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 365.
  24. Weiss Gallery
  25. Eric Chamberlain, Catalogue of the Pepys Library at Magdalene College, Cambridge
  26. Karen Hearn, ‘Johnson, Cornelius (bap. 1593, d. 1661)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 3 Dec 2008
  27. Tittler, Robert (2012). Portraits, Painters and Publics in Provincial England. Oxford University press. p. 14.
  28. Town, Edward; David, Jessica (2016). "The Early Career of Cornelius Johnson". Cornelius Johnson, Painter to King and Country. The Weiss Gallery. p. 18-35.
  29. Weiss Gallery, 2012
  30. Cust, Lionel (1913). "MARCUS GHEERAERTS". Walpole Society Volume 3.
  31. Discovering 'T Leigh'
  32. Zirpolo, Lilian H (2008). The A to Z of Renaissance Art. Scarecrow Press. p. 212.
  33. Burlington Magazine review of volume 10 of the Walpole Society Vol. 42, No. 241 (Apr., 1923), p. 203
  34. Numbers 123 and 124 in Weiss Gallery’s 25th Anniversary publication
  35. Waterhouse, 61
  36. Hearn, Karen (2015). Cornelius Johnson. Paul Holberton publishing. p. 8
  37. Titler, Robert (2013). The face of the city (paperback ed.). Manchester University Press. p. 56.
  38. Hearn, Karen, ed. (2009). Van Dyck in Britain. Tate Publishing. p. 13.
  39. Reynolds, Anna (2013). In Fine Style:The Art of Tudor and Stuart Fashions. Royal Collections Trust. p. 143.
  40. Town, Edward; David, Jessica (2016). "The Early Career of Cornelius Johnson". Cornelius Johnson, Painter to King and Country. The Weiss Gallery. p. 24.
  41. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  42. Christies Auction Catalogue; lot notes, lot 45
  43. quoted from Hearn, Karen, 2003, "The English Career of Cornelius Johnson" in Roding, Juliette Dutch and Flemish Artists in Britain 1550–1800, Primavera, page 124
  44. See auction records at The art world in Britain 1660–1735
  45. UCL web site
  46. Weiss Gallery web site
  47. Haldane Fine Art
  48. Hearn, Karen (2016). "The National & Professional Identities of Cornelius Johnson". Cornelius Johnson, Painter to King and Country. The Weiss Gallery. p. 8.
  49. Hearn, Karen (2016). "The National & Professional Identities of Cornelius Johnson". Cornelius Johnson, Painter to King and Country. The Weiss Gallery. p. 8.
  50. The Janssens Portrait
  51. Hearn, Karen (2015). Cornelius Johnson. Paul Holberton publishing. p. 68.
  52. Alexander J Finberg, A CHRONOLOGICAL LIST OF PORTRAITS BY CORNELIUS JOHNSON, OR JONSON (Walpole Society, Volume 10, 1922)

References

Further reading

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