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A Voice from the Past: Pieter Saenredam’s The Old Town Hall of Amsterdam, Historical Continuity, and the Moral Sublime

A Voice from the Past: Pieter Saenredam’s The Old Town Hall of Amsterdam, Historical Continuity, and the Moral Sublime

Pieter Saenredam,  The Old Town Hall of Amsterdam, 1657, Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum

This essay analyzes Pieter Saenredam’s The Old Town Hall of Amsterdam (1657) together with its pendant, the dedication poem by Constantijn Huygens, both of which originally hung in the burgomasters’ chamber of Amsterdam’s new Town Hall. As it was witnessed by the burgomasters in situ, I argue that the painting had a morally uplifting effect upon its audience, an effect I will define as the sublime. This definition of the sublime as encouragement to virtue is drawn from Franciscus Junius’s The Painting of the Ancients (1638), the first modern treatise on the arts to incorporate Longinus’s classical rhetorical work Peri hypsous (On the Sublime).

DOI: 10.5092/jhna.2016.8.2.6

Acknowledgements

I would like to thank Stijn Bussels, Bram van Oostveldt, Caroline van Eck, and my fellow contributors for their criticism and helpful suggestions along the way. I am grateful for the support of the European Research Council program “Elevated Minds” and the Netherlands Institute for Advanced Studies.

Pieter Saenredam,  The Old Town Hall of Amsterdam, 1657,  Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum
Fig. 1 Pieter Saenredam, The Old Town Hall of Amsterdam, 1657, oil on panel, 65.5 x 84.5 cm. Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum, inv. no. SK-C-1409 (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
Gerrit Adriaensz. Berckheyde,  The Town Hall on the Dam in Amsterdam, 1672,  Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum
Fig. 2 Gerrit Adriaensz. Berckheyde, The Town Hall on the Dam in Amsterdam, 1672, oil on canvas, 33.5 x 41.5 cm. Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum, inv. no. SK-A-34 (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
Claes Jansz. Visscher,  Het Stadhuys van Amsterdam (p. 216), in Ludovic, 1612,
Fig. 3 Claes Jansz. Visscher, Het Stadhuys van Amsterdam (p. 216), in Ludovico Guicciardini, Beschryvinghe van alle de Neder-Landen; anderssins ghenoemt Neder-Duytslandt (Amsterdam: Willem Jansz., 1612) (artwork in the public domain; image courtesy of the Amsterdam Municipal Archives) [side-by-side viewer]
Anonymous engraver, Interior of the burgomasters’ chamber (p. 378), , 1690,
Fig. 4 Anonymous engraver, interior of the burgomasters’ chamber (p. 378), in Gregorio Leti, Teatro Belgico, o vero ritratti historici, chronologici, politici, e geografici, delle sette Provincie Unite, vol. 2 (Amsterdam: Willem de Jonge, 1690) (artwork in the public domain; image courtesy of the Amsterdam Municipal Archives) [side-by-side viewer]
Anonymous engraver, after Claes Jansz. Visscher, View of the old Town Hall, in Jan Krul,‘T Palley, 1636,
Fig. 5 Anonymous engraver, after Claes Jansz. Visscher, view of the old Town Hall, in Jan Krul,‘T Palleys der Amstel-Goden (Amsterdam: Dirck Cornelisz. Houthaeck, 1636) (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
  1. 1. “‘t geen alleen genoeg is om zyn konstroem eeuw in eeuw uit levendig te houden.” Arnold Houbraken, De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen (Amsterdam: printed by the author, 1718), 175. My translation. All translations hereafter are the author’s own, unless otherwise noted.

  2. 2. Pieter Saenredam, The Old Town Hall of Amsterdam, ca. 1658, pen and aquarelle, 22.5 x 16.7 cm. Haarlem, Teylers Museum, inv. no. O 078.

  3. 3. The English translation is quoted from Gary Schwartz and Marten Jan Bok, Pieter Saenredam: The Painter and His Time (London: Thames and Hudson, 1990), 254. They reprint the original Dutch text in full.

  4. 4. Olfert Dapper, Historische Beschryving der Stadt Amsterdam (Amsterdam 1663), 370–71.

  5. 5. Vondel’s “Bouwzang,” composed for the groundbreaking ceremony, declares that, “Amsterdam, so heavily crowned with gold . . . loves freedom as her own soul, and for this hard-fought-for treasure she crowns the market place of the city, the Fisher’s Dam, with a building before which the Athenian would . . . stand mute with open mouth.” Joost von den Vondel, “Bouwzang,” in De werken van Vondel, Deel 5, 1645–1656 (Amsterdam: De Maatschappij voor geode en goedkoope lectuur, 1931), 370–71.

  6. 6. Dapper, Beschryving, 370–71.

  7. 7. “Terwyl myn Burgermeesters Zael, / Nogh glans trekt, uyt dien ouden prael.” Pieter Rixtel, “Op het Stadthuys van Amsterdam, Geschildert door den vermaerden Schilder Gerrit Berkheyden, van Haelrem,” Mengel-Rymen (Haarlem: Vincent Casteleyn, 1669), 42. The poem opens with a discussion of the work by Saenredam but, as the title suggests, deals primarily with one of the many paintings of the new Town Hall by Berckheyde. The purpose of the description of The Old Town Hall is to draw an analogy between its ability to make the destroyed building present, and that of Berckheyde’s work to carry the appearance of the place-bound new Town Hall over great distances. The translation here follows Schwartz and Bok, who reproduce a fragment of the poem. See Schwartz and Bok, Pieter Saenredam, 242.

  8. 8. “Het tegenwoordige Raathuis zig verheffende op zyn oude glorie, dus doet spreken.” Houbraken, De groote schouburgh, 175.

  9. 9. Franciscus Junius, The Painting of the Ancients (London: Richard Hodgkinsonne, 1638), 78.

  10. 10. Franciscus Junius, The Painting of the Ancients: De pictura veterum, according to the English Translation (1638). Vol. 1 of The Literature of Classical Art , ed. Keith Aldrich, Philipp Fehl, and Raina Fehl (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991), lxiv.

  11. 11. The precise date of the treatise and the identity of the author are uncertain. See Longinus, On the Sublime, ed. D. Russell, trans. W. H. Fyfe (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1999), 145–48.

  12. 12. Ibid., 179.

  13. 13. Schwartz and Bok, Pieter Saenredam, 189.

  14. 14. The Old Town Hall has figured as an example in two arguments for Saenredam as antiquarian; see I. Q. van Regteren-Altena, “Saenredam archeaoloog,” Oud-Holland 48, no. 1, (1931): 1–12; and Boudewijn de Bakker, “Saenredam als oudheidkundige,” Kunstschrift Openbar Kunstbezit 32,  no. 1 (1988): 25–30. It is described in P. T. Swillens, Catalogue Raisonné of the Works of Pieter Jansz. Saenredam (Utrecht: Utrecht Centraal Museum, 1961), 50–57; and in Schwartz and Bok, Pieter Saenredam, 188–91, 242-44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/187501731X00016

  15. 15. Katherine Fremantle, The Baroque Town Hall of Amsterdam (Utrecht: Haentjens Dekker & Gumbert., 1959), 61–66.

  16. 16. Dapper, Historische Beschryving, 331.

  17. 17. Fremantle, Baroque Town Hall, 32.

  18. 18. Fremantle, Baroque Town Hall, 24.

  19. 19. “Verdroot u langer dus te slaven/ dat gij u levend liet begraven/ in puin, op uwen slechten vloer.” Joost von den Vondel, “Op het verbranden van ‘t Stadhuis van Amsterdam,” in De werken van Vondel, 542.

  20. 20. “Dit is het oude Raethuÿs der stadt Amsterdam, welck afbrande int jaer 1651 den 7 julij, in 3 uren tyt sonder meer. Pieter Saenredam, Heeft dit eerst naer t Leeven Geteeckent, met al sijn Coleuren int Jaer 1641. en dit Geschildert, int jaer 1657.” The building in fact burned in 1652, not 1651, as the painting claims. A similar inscription was added to the original drawing, presumably by the painter, where it is clarified that “sonder meer” (without more) refers to buildings. The drawing is now kept at the Amsterdam Municipal Archives (Het Oude Stadhuis op de Dam, 1641, pen and watercolor, 37 x 49 cm, inv. no. 2010-065).

  21. 21. The development of this complex is discussed briefly in Swillens, Catalogue, 50–52; and most recently in Esther Gramsbergen, Kwartiermakers in Amsterdam: Stedelijke instellingen als aanjagers van de ruimtelijke ontwikkeling, 1580–1880 (Nijmegen: Van Tilt, 2014), 57–62.

  22. 22. See, for example, Johannes Pontanus, Historische Beschrijvinghe der seer wijt beroemde coopstadt Amsterdam (Amsterdam: Jodocus Hondius, 1614), 143, in which the edge of the building with its Gothic gable is seen to the left of the former weigh-house on the Dam.

  23. 23. See Fremantle, Baroque Town Hall, esp. 30–56.

  24. 24. Ibid., 71 n6.

  25. 25. R. van Luttervelt, Het Raadhuis aan de Dam (Amsterdam: Gemeentelijke Commissie Heemkennis Amsterdam, 1950), 6.

  26. 26. This is suggested by van Luttervelt; ibid.

  27. 27. For the best overview of this argument, see Gary Schwartz, “Saenredam, Huygens and the Utrecht Bull,” Simiolus: Netherlands Quarterly for the History of Art 1, no. 2 (1966–67): 79n21. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/378049.

  28. 28. For Saenredam’s friendship with van Campen, see Marten Jan Bok, “Familie, vrienden en opdrachtgevers,” in Jacob van Campen: Het klassieke ideal in de Gouden Eeuw, ed. Jacobine Huisken, Koen Ottenheym, and Gary Schwartz (Amsterdam: Architectura en Natura Pers, 1995), 34.

  29. 29. I follow here the line of argument in Schwartz and Bok, Pieter Saenredam, 189–90.

  30. 30. G. Roosegaarde Bisschop, “De geschilderde maquette in Nederland,” Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 7 (1956): 167–217. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22145966-90000299

  31. 31. Ibid., 199–210. A related example now hangs in the Dordrechts Museum, which shows the fire in the Nieuwkerk in Dordrecht. It is signed by Jan Doudijn and dated 1568, with an inscription describing the fire running around the frame. As with the painting from Zaltbommel, the inscription is a jaardicht (chronogram). The work clearly never functioned as a maquette, however, as the burning church serves as the deep backdrop to the efforts in the foreground to save it.

  32. 32. Dirck van Bleyswijck, Beschryvinge der stadt Delft (Delft: Arnold Bon, 1667), 119. The anonymous painting is now in the Museum Prinsenhof in Delft (oil on panel, 192 x 30 cm, inv. no. PDS 115).

  33. 33. The inscription reads, “Aldus was den toren soe als sy plach te staen, maer sy is door cracht van ‘t vier al vergaen” (This was the tower as she stood, but she perished by the power of fire). Bleyswijck, Beschryvinge der stadt Delft, 119.

  34. 34. Bisschop, “De geschilderde maquette in Nederland,” 200–201. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22145966-90000299

  35. 35. Luttevelt, Raadhuis, 21.

  36. 36. Wouter Kuyper, Dutch Classicist Architecture: A Survey of Dutch Architecture, Gardens and Anglo-Dutch Architectural Relations from 1625 to 1700 (Delft: Delft University Press, 1980), 72–74.

  37. 37. Kuyper, Dutch Classicist Architecture, 198.

  38. 38. Eddy de Jongh, “’t Gotsche krulligh mall’: De houding tegenover de gotiek in het zeventiende-eeuwse Holland,” Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 24 (1973): 116–17.

  39. 39. Vondel, “Inwydinge van ‘t stadthuis t’Amsterdam,” in De werken van Vondel, 173.

  40. 40. “En hoe vergeet dees stadt, uit visscheren gesproten / Zich zelve aen zulck een pracht, by d’ouden ongewent! / Geluckigh is de Staet, die zijnen oirsprong kent, / De middelmaet bewaert.” Ibid.

  41. 41. Jan Vos, “Op de kamer der Eed. Eed. Heeren Burgemeesteren van Amsterdam,” in Strydt tusschen de Doodt en Natuur, of Zeege der Schilderkunst (Amsterdam: Jacob Lescaille, 1654), 38.

  42. 42. Dapper, Historische Beschryving, 370–71.

  43. 43. Dapper records the tablet, dated 1660, in the adjacent burgemeesters vertrek, which translates roughly as “burgomasters’ chamber,” immediately to the south. Ibid., 371. However, Fremantle notes that the engraver, Elias Noski, was not paid until 1666. This may be related to the transference of the tablet to the burgomasters’ chamber. See Fremantle, Baroque Town Hall, 68.

  44. 44. The relief is actually located far higher up on the wall but included here probably to identify the site.

  45. 45. Letter from Jacob van der Burgh to Constantijn Huygens, in Constantijn Huygens, Briefwisseling. Deel 5, 1649–1663, ed. J. A. Worp (Den Haag: Martinus Nijhoff, 1916), 278.

  46. 46. Constantijn Huygens, “Geluck aende ee. heeren regeerders van Amsterdam, in haer niewe stadhuis,” in Gedichten, Deel 6, 1656–1661, ed. J. A. Worp (Groningen: J. B. Wolters, 1896), 108.

  47. 47. Constantijn Huygens, Domus, ed. F. R. E. Blum, H. G. Bruin, and K. A. Ottenheym (Zutphen: Walberg Pers, 1990), 31.

  48. 48. For a discussion of Vitruvius’s concept of reason in other poems by Huygens, see Marijke Spies, “De ‘Maetzang’ van Van Campen: De stem van de literatuur,” in Jacob van Campen: Het klassieke ideaal in de Gouden Eeuw, ed. Jacobine Huisken, Koen Ottenheym, and Gary Schwartz (Amsterdam: Architectura & Natura Pers, 1995), 229–32.

  49. 49. On van Campen, Vitruvius and the design of the new Town Hall, see esp. Koen Ottenheym, “Architectuur,” in Jacob van Campen (see note 48 above), 190–94.

  50. 50. Franciscus Junius, De pictura veterum (Amsterdam: Johannes Blaeu, 1637). A second Latin edition was printed in Rotterdam in 1694.

  51. 51. Franciscus Junius, The Painting of the Ancients.

  52. 52. Franciscus Junius, De schilder-konst der Oude (Middelburg: Zacharias Roman, 1641).

  53. 53. This volume appears under item 502, “Libri Miscellani in Quarto,” as “The Painting of the Ancients by Iunius, Lond. 1638,” in Catalogus Variorum & Insignium in omni Facultate & Lingua Librorum, Bibliothecæ Nob. Amplissimique Viri Constantini Hugenii (The Hague: Abraham Troyel, 1688).

  54. 54. This book appears under item 50, “In Quarto,” as “De Schilderkonst der Oude/ begreepen in drie Boecken/ door Franciscus Junius/ tot Middelburgh/ 1641,” in Catalogus, van verscheyde treffelijcke uytnemende Boecken, Bestande in alderhande Faculteyt/ daer onder veel met schoone Figueren. Naergelaten van zaliger Pieter Saenredam (Haarlem: Robbert Tinneken, 1667).

  55. 55. Longinus, On the Sublime, 179.

  56. 56. Junius, Painting of the Ancients, 78.

  57. 57. This painting now hangs in the Amsterdam Museum (Jacob van der Ulft, after Pieter Saenredam, The Old Town Hall on the Dam, after 1657, oil, 37 x 49 cm, inv. no. SB 4503).

  58. 58. Junius, Painting of the Ancients, 9.

  59. 59. Longinus, On the Sublime, 301.

  60. 60. Ibid., 302–3.

  61. 61. Ibid., 56–57.

  62. 62. Jan Krul, ‘T Palleys der Amstel-Goden (Amsterdam: Dirck Cornelisz. Houthaeck, 1636), 1.

  63. 63. Ibid., 2.

  64. 64. Marijke Spies, “Minerva’s commentaar: gedichten rond het Amsterdamse stadhuis,” in De zeventiende eeuw, jaargang 9 (Hilversum: Uitgeverij Verloren), esp. 29.

  65. 65. Longinus, On the Sublime, 211.

  66. 66. Junius, Painting of the Ancients, 250.

Bakker, Boudewijn de. “Saenredam als oudheidkundige.” Kunstschrift Openbar Kunstbezit 32, no. 1 (1988): 25–30

Bisschop, G. Roosegaarde. “De geschilderde maquette in Nederland.” Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 7 (1956): 167–217. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22145966-90000299

Bleyswijck, Dirck van. Beschryvinge der stadt Delft. Delft: Arnold Bon, 1667.

Bok, Marten Jan. “Familie, vrienden en opdrachtgevers.” In Jacob van Campen: Het klassieke ideal in de Gouden Eeuw, edited by Jacobine Huisken, Koen Ottenheym, and Gary Schwartz, 27–52. Amsterdam: Architectura en Natura Pers, 1995.

Catalogus, van verscheyde treffelijcke uytnemende Boecken, Bestande in alderhande Faculteyt/ daer onder veel met schoone Figueren. Naergelaten van zaliger Pieter Saenredam. Haarlem: Robbert Tinneken, 1667.

Catalogus Variorum & Insignium in omni Facultate & Lingua Librorum, Bibliothecæ Nob. Amplissimique Viri Constantini Hugenii. The Hague: Abraham Troyel, 1688.

Dapper, Olfert. Historische Beschryving der Stadt Amsterdam. Amsterdam: Jacob van Meurs, 1663.

Fremantle, Katherine. The Baroque Town Hall of Amsterdam. Utrecht: Haentjens Dekker & Gumbert., 1959.

Gramsbergen, Esther. Kwartiermakers in Amsterdam: Stedelijke instellingen als aanjagers van de ruimtelijke ontwikkeling, 1580–1880. Nijmegen: Van Tilt, 2014.

Houbraken, Arnold. De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen. Amsterdam: published by the author, 1718.

Huygens, Constantijn. Domus. Edited by F. R. E. Blum, H. G. Bruin, and K. A. Ottenheym. Zutphen: Walberg Pers, 1990.

Huygens, Constantijn. Gedichten, Deel 6, 1656–1661. Edited by J. A. Worp. Groningen: J. B. Wolters, 1896.

Huygens, Constantijn. Briefwisseling, Deel 5, 1649–1663. Edited by J. A. Worp. Den Haag: Martinus Nijhoff, 1916.

Jongh, Eddy de. “’t Gotsche krulligh mall’: De houding tegenover de gotiek in het zeventiende-eeuwse Holland.” Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 24 (1973): 85–145.

Junius, Franciscus. De pictura veterum. Amsterdam: Johannes Blaeu, 1637.

Junius, Franciscus. The Painting of the Ancients. London: Richard Hodgkinsonne, 1638.

Junius, Franciscus. De schilder-konst der Oude. Middelburg: Zacharias Roman, 1641.

Junius, Franciscus. De pictura veterum libri tres. Rotterdam: Regner Leers, 1694.

Junius, Franciscus. The Painting of the Ancients: De pictura veterum, according to the English Translation (1638). Vol. 1 of The Literature of Classical Art. Edited by Keith Aldrich, Philipp Fehl, and Raina Fehl. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991.

Krul, Jan.‘T Palleys der Amstel-Goden. Amsterdam: Dirck Cornelisz. Houthaeck, 1636.

Kuyper, Wouter. Dutch Classicist Architecture: A Survey of Dutch Architecture, Gardens and Anglo-Dutch Architectural Relations from 1625 to 1700. Delft: Delft University Press, 1980.

Longinus. On the Sublime. Edited by D. Russell. Translated by W. H. Fyfe. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1999.

Luttervelt, R. van. Het Raadhuis aan de Dam. Amsterdam: Gemeentelijke Commissie Heemkennis Amsterdam, 1950.

Ottenheym, Koen. “Architectuur.” In Jacob van Campen: Het klassieke ideaal in de Gouden Eeuw, edited by Jacobine Huisken, Koen Ottenheym, and Gary Schwartz, 155–200. Amsterdam: Architectura & Natura Pers, 1995.

Pontanus, Johannes. Historische Beschrijvinghe der seer wijt beroemde coopstadt Amsterdam. Amsterdam: Jodocus Hondius, 1614.

Regteren-Altena, I. Q. van. “Saenredam archeaoloog.” Oud-Holland 48, no. 1(1931): 1–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/187501731X00016

Rixtel, Pieter. Mengel-Rymen. Haarlem: Vincent Casteleyn, 1669.

Schwartz, Gary. “Saenredam, Huygens and the Utrecht Bull.” Simiolus: Netherlands Quarterly for the History of Art 1, no. 2 (1966–67): 69–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3780492

Schwartz, Gary, and Marten Jan Bok. Pieter Saenredam: The Painter and His Time. London: Thames and Hudson, 1990.

Spies, Marijke. “De ‘Maetzang’ van Van Campen: De stem van de literatuur.” In Jacob van Campen: Het klassieke ideaal in de Gouden Eeuw, edited by Jacobine Huisken, Koen Ottenheym, and Gary Schwartz, 227–38. Amsterdam: Architectura & Natura Pers, 1995.

Spies, Marijke. “Minerva’s commentaar: gedichten rond het Amsterdamse stadhuis.” In De zeventiende eeuw, jaargang 9, 15–32. Hilversum: Uitgeverij Verloren, 1993.

Swillens, P. T. Catalogue Raisonné of the Works of Pieter Jansz. Saenredam. Utrecht: Utrecht Centraal Museum, 1961.

Vondel, Joost von den. De werken van Vondel, Deel 5, 1645–1656. Amsterdam: De Maatschappij voor geode en goedkoope lectuur, 1931.

Vos, Jan. Strydt tusschen de Doodt en Natuur, of Zeege der Schilderkunst. Amsterdam: Jacob Lescaille, 1654.

List of Illustrations

Pieter Saenredam,  The Old Town Hall of Amsterdam, 1657,  Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum
Fig. 1 Pieter Saenredam, The Old Town Hall of Amsterdam, 1657, oil on panel, 65.5 x 84.5 cm. Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum, inv. no. SK-C-1409 (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
Gerrit Adriaensz. Berckheyde,  The Town Hall on the Dam in Amsterdam, 1672,  Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum
Fig. 2 Gerrit Adriaensz. Berckheyde, The Town Hall on the Dam in Amsterdam, 1672, oil on canvas, 33.5 x 41.5 cm. Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum, inv. no. SK-A-34 (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]
Claes Jansz. Visscher,  Het Stadhuys van Amsterdam (p. 216), in Ludovic, 1612,
Fig. 3 Claes Jansz. Visscher, Het Stadhuys van Amsterdam (p. 216), in Ludovico Guicciardini, Beschryvinghe van alle de Neder-Landen; anderssins ghenoemt Neder-Duytslandt (Amsterdam: Willem Jansz., 1612) (artwork in the public domain; image courtesy of the Amsterdam Municipal Archives) [side-by-side viewer]
Anonymous engraver, Interior of the burgomasters’ chamber (p. 378), , 1690,
Fig. 4 Anonymous engraver, interior of the burgomasters’ chamber (p. 378), in Gregorio Leti, Teatro Belgico, o vero ritratti historici, chronologici, politici, e geografici, delle sette Provincie Unite, vol. 2 (Amsterdam: Willem de Jonge, 1690) (artwork in the public domain; image courtesy of the Amsterdam Municipal Archives) [side-by-side viewer]
Anonymous engraver, after Claes Jansz. Visscher, View of the old Town Hall, in Jan Krul,‘T Palley, 1636,
Fig. 5 Anonymous engraver, after Claes Jansz. Visscher, view of the old Town Hall, in Jan Krul,‘T Palleys der Amstel-Goden (Amsterdam: Dirck Cornelisz. Houthaeck, 1636) (artwork in the public domain) [side-by-side viewer]

Footnotes

  1. 1. “‘t geen alleen genoeg is om zyn konstroem eeuw in eeuw uit levendig te houden.” Arnold Houbraken, De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen (Amsterdam: printed by the author, 1718), 175. My translation. All translations hereafter are the author’s own, unless otherwise noted.

  2. 2. Pieter Saenredam, The Old Town Hall of Amsterdam, ca. 1658, pen and aquarelle, 22.5 x 16.7 cm. Haarlem, Teylers Museum, inv. no. O 078.

  3. 3. The English translation is quoted from Gary Schwartz and Marten Jan Bok, Pieter Saenredam: The Painter and His Time (London: Thames and Hudson, 1990), 254. They reprint the original Dutch text in full.

  4. 4. Olfert Dapper, Historische Beschryving der Stadt Amsterdam (Amsterdam 1663), 370–71.

  5. 5. Vondel’s “Bouwzang,” composed for the groundbreaking ceremony, declares that, “Amsterdam, so heavily crowned with gold . . . loves freedom as her own soul, and for this hard-fought-for treasure she crowns the market place of the city, the Fisher’s Dam, with a building before which the Athenian would . . . stand mute with open mouth.” Joost von den Vondel, “Bouwzang,” in De werken van Vondel, Deel 5, 1645–1656 (Amsterdam: De Maatschappij voor geode en goedkoope lectuur, 1931), 370–71.

  6. 6. Dapper, Beschryving, 370–71.

  7. 7. “Terwyl myn Burgermeesters Zael, / Nogh glans trekt, uyt dien ouden prael.” Pieter Rixtel, “Op het Stadthuys van Amsterdam, Geschildert door den vermaerden Schilder Gerrit Berkheyden, van Haelrem,” Mengel-Rymen (Haarlem: Vincent Casteleyn, 1669), 42. The poem opens with a discussion of the work by Saenredam but, as the title suggests, deals primarily with one of the many paintings of the new Town Hall by Berckheyde. The purpose of the description of The Old Town Hall is to draw an analogy between its ability to make the destroyed building present, and that of Berckheyde’s work to carry the appearance of the place-bound new Town Hall over great distances. The translation here follows Schwartz and Bok, who reproduce a fragment of the poem. See Schwartz and Bok, Pieter Saenredam, 242.

  8. 8. “Het tegenwoordige Raathuis zig verheffende op zyn oude glorie, dus doet spreken.” Houbraken, De groote schouburgh, 175.

  9. 9. Franciscus Junius, The Painting of the Ancients (London: Richard Hodgkinsonne, 1638), 78.

  10. 10. Franciscus Junius, The Painting of the Ancients: De pictura veterum, according to the English Translation (1638). Vol. 1 of The Literature of Classical Art , ed. Keith Aldrich, Philipp Fehl, and Raina Fehl (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991), lxiv.

  11. 11. The precise date of the treatise and the identity of the author are uncertain. See Longinus, On the Sublime, ed. D. Russell, trans. W. H. Fyfe (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1999), 145–48.

  12. 12. Ibid., 179.

  13. 13. Schwartz and Bok, Pieter Saenredam, 189.

  14. 14. The Old Town Hall has figured as an example in two arguments for Saenredam as antiquarian; see I. Q. van Regteren-Altena, “Saenredam archeaoloog,” Oud-Holland 48, no. 1, (1931): 1–12; and Boudewijn de Bakker, “Saenredam als oudheidkundige,” Kunstschrift Openbar Kunstbezit 32,  no. 1 (1988): 25–30. It is described in P. T. Swillens, Catalogue Raisonné of the Works of Pieter Jansz. Saenredam (Utrecht: Utrecht Centraal Museum, 1961), 50–57; and in Schwartz and Bok, Pieter Saenredam, 188–91, 242-44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/187501731X00016

  15. 15. Katherine Fremantle, The Baroque Town Hall of Amsterdam (Utrecht: Haentjens Dekker & Gumbert., 1959), 61–66.

  16. 16. Dapper, Historische Beschryving, 331.

  17. 17. Fremantle, Baroque Town Hall, 32.

  18. 18. Fremantle, Baroque Town Hall, 24.

  19. 19. “Verdroot u langer dus te slaven/ dat gij u levend liet begraven/ in puin, op uwen slechten vloer.” Joost von den Vondel, “Op het verbranden van ‘t Stadhuis van Amsterdam,” in De werken van Vondel, 542.

  20. 20. “Dit is het oude Raethuÿs der stadt Amsterdam, welck afbrande int jaer 1651 den 7 julij, in 3 uren tyt sonder meer. Pieter Saenredam, Heeft dit eerst naer t Leeven Geteeckent, met al sijn Coleuren int Jaer 1641. en dit Geschildert, int jaer 1657.” The building in fact burned in 1652, not 1651, as the painting claims. A similar inscription was added to the original drawing, presumably by the painter, where it is clarified that “sonder meer” (without more) refers to buildings. The drawing is now kept at the Amsterdam Municipal Archives (Het Oude Stadhuis op de Dam, 1641, pen and watercolor, 37 x 49 cm, inv. no. 2010-065).

  21. 21. The development of this complex is discussed briefly in Swillens, Catalogue, 50–52; and most recently in Esther Gramsbergen, Kwartiermakers in Amsterdam: Stedelijke instellingen als aanjagers van de ruimtelijke ontwikkeling, 1580–1880 (Nijmegen: Van Tilt, 2014), 57–62.

  22. 22. See, for example, Johannes Pontanus, Historische Beschrijvinghe der seer wijt beroemde coopstadt Amsterdam (Amsterdam: Jodocus Hondius, 1614), 143, in which the edge of the building with its Gothic gable is seen to the left of the former weigh-house on the Dam.

  23. 23. See Fremantle, Baroque Town Hall, esp. 30–56.

  24. 24. Ibid., 71 n6.

  25. 25. R. van Luttervelt, Het Raadhuis aan de Dam (Amsterdam: Gemeentelijke Commissie Heemkennis Amsterdam, 1950), 6.

  26. 26. This is suggested by van Luttervelt; ibid.

  27. 27. For the best overview of this argument, see Gary Schwartz, “Saenredam, Huygens and the Utrecht Bull,” Simiolus: Netherlands Quarterly for the History of Art 1, no. 2 (1966–67): 79n21. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/378049.

  28. 28. For Saenredam’s friendship with van Campen, see Marten Jan Bok, “Familie, vrienden en opdrachtgevers,” in Jacob van Campen: Het klassieke ideal in de Gouden Eeuw, ed. Jacobine Huisken, Koen Ottenheym, and Gary Schwartz (Amsterdam: Architectura en Natura Pers, 1995), 34.

  29. 29. I follow here the line of argument in Schwartz and Bok, Pieter Saenredam, 189–90.

  30. 30. G. Roosegaarde Bisschop, “De geschilderde maquette in Nederland,” Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 7 (1956): 167–217. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22145966-90000299

  31. 31. Ibid., 199–210. A related example now hangs in the Dordrechts Museum, which shows the fire in the Nieuwkerk in Dordrecht. It is signed by Jan Doudijn and dated 1568, with an inscription describing the fire running around the frame. As with the painting from Zaltbommel, the inscription is a jaardicht (chronogram). The work clearly never functioned as a maquette, however, as the burning church serves as the deep backdrop to the efforts in the foreground to save it.

  32. 32. Dirck van Bleyswijck, Beschryvinge der stadt Delft (Delft: Arnold Bon, 1667), 119. The anonymous painting is now in the Museum Prinsenhof in Delft (oil on panel, 192 x 30 cm, inv. no. PDS 115).

  33. 33. The inscription reads, “Aldus was den toren soe als sy plach te staen, maer sy is door cracht van ‘t vier al vergaen” (This was the tower as she stood, but she perished by the power of fire). Bleyswijck, Beschryvinge der stadt Delft, 119.

  34. 34. Bisschop, “De geschilderde maquette in Nederland,” 200–201. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22145966-90000299

  35. 35. Luttevelt, Raadhuis, 21.

  36. 36. Wouter Kuyper, Dutch Classicist Architecture: A Survey of Dutch Architecture, Gardens and Anglo-Dutch Architectural Relations from 1625 to 1700 (Delft: Delft University Press, 1980), 72–74.

  37. 37. Kuyper, Dutch Classicist Architecture, 198.

  38. 38. Eddy de Jongh, “’t Gotsche krulligh mall’: De houding tegenover de gotiek in het zeventiende-eeuwse Holland,” Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 24 (1973): 116–17.

  39. 39. Vondel, “Inwydinge van ‘t stadthuis t’Amsterdam,” in De werken van Vondel, 173.

  40. 40. “En hoe vergeet dees stadt, uit visscheren gesproten / Zich zelve aen zulck een pracht, by d’ouden ongewent! / Geluckigh is de Staet, die zijnen oirsprong kent, / De middelmaet bewaert.” Ibid.

  41. 41. Jan Vos, “Op de kamer der Eed. Eed. Heeren Burgemeesteren van Amsterdam,” in Strydt tusschen de Doodt en Natuur, of Zeege der Schilderkunst (Amsterdam: Jacob Lescaille, 1654), 38.

  42. 42. Dapper, Historische Beschryving, 370–71.

  43. 43. Dapper records the tablet, dated 1660, in the adjacent burgemeesters vertrek, which translates roughly as “burgomasters’ chamber,” immediately to the south. Ibid., 371. However, Fremantle notes that the engraver, Elias Noski, was not paid until 1666. This may be related to the transference of the tablet to the burgomasters’ chamber. See Fremantle, Baroque Town Hall, 68.

  44. 44. The relief is actually located far higher up on the wall but included here probably to identify the site.

  45. 45. Letter from Jacob van der Burgh to Constantijn Huygens, in Constantijn Huygens, Briefwisseling. Deel 5, 1649–1663, ed. J. A. Worp (Den Haag: Martinus Nijhoff, 1916), 278.

  46. 46. Constantijn Huygens, “Geluck aende ee. heeren regeerders van Amsterdam, in haer niewe stadhuis,” in Gedichten, Deel 6, 1656–1661, ed. J. A. Worp (Groningen: J. B. Wolters, 1896), 108.

  47. 47. Constantijn Huygens, Domus, ed. F. R. E. Blum, H. G. Bruin, and K. A. Ottenheym (Zutphen: Walberg Pers, 1990), 31.

  48. 48. For a discussion of Vitruvius’s concept of reason in other poems by Huygens, see Marijke Spies, “De ‘Maetzang’ van Van Campen: De stem van de literatuur,” in Jacob van Campen: Het klassieke ideaal in de Gouden Eeuw, ed. Jacobine Huisken, Koen Ottenheym, and Gary Schwartz (Amsterdam: Architectura & Natura Pers, 1995), 229–32.

  49. 49. On van Campen, Vitruvius and the design of the new Town Hall, see esp. Koen Ottenheym, “Architectuur,” in Jacob van Campen (see note 48 above), 190–94.

  50. 50. Franciscus Junius, De pictura veterum (Amsterdam: Johannes Blaeu, 1637). A second Latin edition was printed in Rotterdam in 1694.

  51. 51. Franciscus Junius, The Painting of the Ancients.

  52. 52. Franciscus Junius, De schilder-konst der Oude (Middelburg: Zacharias Roman, 1641).

  53. 53. This volume appears under item 502, “Libri Miscellani in Quarto,” as “The Painting of the Ancients by Iunius, Lond. 1638,” in Catalogus Variorum & Insignium in omni Facultate & Lingua Librorum, Bibliothecæ Nob. Amplissimique Viri Constantini Hugenii (The Hague: Abraham Troyel, 1688).

  54. 54. This book appears under item 50, “In Quarto,” as “De Schilderkonst der Oude/ begreepen in drie Boecken/ door Franciscus Junius/ tot Middelburgh/ 1641,” in Catalogus, van verscheyde treffelijcke uytnemende Boecken, Bestande in alderhande Faculteyt/ daer onder veel met schoone Figueren. Naergelaten van zaliger Pieter Saenredam (Haarlem: Robbert Tinneken, 1667).

  55. 55. Longinus, On the Sublime, 179.

  56. 56. Junius, Painting of the Ancients, 78.

  57. 57. This painting now hangs in the Amsterdam Museum (Jacob van der Ulft, after Pieter Saenredam, The Old Town Hall on the Dam, after 1657, oil, 37 x 49 cm, inv. no. SB 4503).

  58. 58. Junius, Painting of the Ancients, 9.

  59. 59. Longinus, On the Sublime, 301.

  60. 60. Ibid., 302–3.

  61. 61. Ibid., 56–57.

  62. 62. Jan Krul, ‘T Palleys der Amstel-Goden (Amsterdam: Dirck Cornelisz. Houthaeck, 1636), 1.

  63. 63. Ibid., 2.

  64. 64. Marijke Spies, “Minerva’s commentaar: gedichten rond het Amsterdamse stadhuis,” in De zeventiende eeuw, jaargang 9 (Hilversum: Uitgeverij Verloren), esp. 29.

  65. 65. Longinus, On the Sublime, 211.

  66. 66. Junius, Painting of the Ancients, 250.

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DOI: 10.5092/jhna.2016.8.2.6
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Lorne Darnell, "A Voice from the Past: Pieter Saenredam’s The Old Town Hall of Amsterdam, Historical Continuity, and the Moral Sublime," Journal of Historians of Netherlandish Art 8:2 (Summer 2016) DOI: 10.5092/jhna.2016.8.2.6

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