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Willem van Nieulandt II

Guilliam or Willem van Nieulandt or van Nieuwelandt[1] (1582/84–1635) was a Flemish painter, engraver, poet and playwright from Antwerp. He spent two thirds of his career in the Habsburg Netherlands and the remainder in Italy and the Dutch Republic.[2] He is known for his Italianate landscape paintings and prints, often real views or capricci of landscapes and buildings from in or around Rome enlivened by contemporary figures or biblical or mythological scenes.[3] He is regarded as the principal poet and playwright active in the Habsburg Netherlands in the first three decades of the 17th century.[2]

Guilliam van Nieulandt II
Guilliam van Nieulandt in Cornelis de Bie's Het Gulden Cabinet.
Born
Guilliam van Nieulandt

1584
Died1635 (aged 50–51)
NationalityFlemish
Known forPainting, poetry, stage plays
MovementBaroque

Biography edit

He was born in Antwerp in 1582 or 1584 as the son of Adriaen van Nieulandt the elder (died 1603) and Geertruyd Loyson (died ca. 1627).[3] His father was a merchant dealing in quills as was his grandfather who was also admitted as a master of the Guild of Saint Luke of Antwerp in 1573.[4] His family included a number of artists such as his uncle Guilliam or Willem van Nieulandt (I) who was a painter and draftsperson.[5] His younger brother Adriaen van Nieulandt the younger (born in 1586 in Antwerp) became a decorative painter of interiors, print artist, art dealer, appraiser, painter and draftsperson and was mainly active in Amsterdam.[6] The van Nielandt family moved to Amsterdam in 1589, after the Fall of Antwerp, possibly because they were Protestants or simply for economic reasons as Antwerp was suffering the effects of the ongoing war with Holland.[2] Another brother called Jacob van Nieulandt was born in 1593/94 in Amsterdam where he became an art dealer, painter, innkeeper and draftsperson.[7] Father van Nieulandt became a poorter of Amsterdam in 1594, which shows that he was of good means.[2]

 
Roman capriccio with the Septizodium, the Tomb of Porsenna and the Temple of Vesta

According to the early biographer Arnold Houbraken, Willem became in 1599 a pupil of Roelant Savery, another Flemish émigré living in Amsterdam known for his landscapes, still lifes and animal paintings.[8] Contemporary art historians have argued that he was not the pupil of Roelant Savery, but of his brother Jacob Savery, an artist specialised in still lifes, animals, landscapes en genre paintings.[3] In 1601 he travelled to Rome, where he worked from 1601 to 1603 in the workshop of his uncle Guilliam van Nieulandt I and later in the workshop of Paul Bril, a prominent Flemish landscape painter. In the years 1602 and 1603 he lived with his uncle Guilliam van Nieulandt I in the Via Paulina, now Via del Babuino, in the same house where the Antwerp painter Abraham Janssens was also living.[2][3] According to Arnold Houbraken, he specialized in Rome in painting artistic ruins of monuments, arches, and temples, many of which he then engraved himself.[8]

 
Jacob Returning to Canaan

He returned to the Low Countries in 1604 first residing in Amsterdam.[2] On 11 February 1606 the 22-year-old Willem married in Amsterdam Anna Hustaert (or Huystaert) who was a native of Antwerp but had grown up in Amsterdam. Willem had ostensibly returned to the Roman Catholic faith during his Roman sojourn, but the bans for his marriage in Amsterdam were published in the Reformed Church, casting some doubt on the sincerity of his conversion.[2] The couple settled in Antwerp. In the guild year 1605-1606 he was admitted as a master painter in the Guild of Saint Luke of Antwerp as the son of a master. He took in the same year an apprentice by the name of Peerken Hermans.[9] On 13 April 1606 he became a citizen of Antwerp. His son Adriaen was born in 1607.[3] On 26 February 1611 his daughter Constancia or Constantia was baptized in the church which is now Antwerp Cathedral.[9] She later married the still life painter Adriaen van Utrecht and was a well regarded poet and still life painter.[10]

 
Adoration of the Magi

The violence of the Eighty Years' War had caused the decline of Antwerp's chambers of rhetoric (rederijkerskamers) which staged theatre plays in the city. The Twelve Years' Truce, which established a temporary reprieve from the Eighty Years' War from 1609 to 1621, allowed for their revival. It is likely that the Antwerp chamber of rhetoric Olyftack (Olive Branch) commissioned Willem van Nieulandt to assist with the restoration of their meeting room and performance area. It paid him for a painting of the Virgin Mary and the renewal of its blazon. By the winter of 1615, he had finished his restoration work. On 25 September of the same year, together with Joan David Heemsen, he took the oath as an elder (hoofdman) of the resurrected chamber of rhetoric, and in November the performances of two of his tragedies, Livia, already completed in March 1614, and Saul, written shortly afterwards, began. He was very successful with these plays which helped revive the Antwerp theatre scene.[11]

On 22 May 1629 he witnessed in Antwerp the baptism of the first child of his daughter Constantia. At some unknown time after this date he returned to Amsterdam were he published his final tragedy in 1635, which he had written in the two years before he left Antwerp. He executed a will on 24 October 1635 while he was sick in bed in his home in Amsterdam. He signed the will with ' Giu. v. Nieulandt'. Shortly thereafter he died.[3]

Artworks edit

 
View of a port with ships engraved by van Nieulandt after design by Paul Bril

He created landscape paintings of views in and around Rome, most of them capricci of Roman buildings and ruins, often including a biblical or mythological scene or shepherds and travellers.[2] He had made many sketches of Rome and its surroundings which he used during the rest of his career as backdrops for his paintings and prints. While his drawings were detailed and topographically accurate, his paintings usually consisted of fanciful capricci of Rome's architectural heritage often placing familiar monuments next to invented structures in imaginary landscapes.[12]

He was a prolific printmaker who created many etchings of Roman ruins and Italian landscapes that were published in Antwerp under his supervision. Some of them were carved after drawings of the brothers Matthijs Bril and Paul Bril, Sebastiaen Vrancx and his own drawings.[2] One series of 10 etchings of Roman ruins were copied and published by Claes Jansz. Visscher in Amsterdam. Jan van de Velde and Cornelis Danckert also reproduced some of his etchings in Amsterdam. This helped spread his work in the Dutch Republic.[2]

Literary oeuvre edit

 
River landscape with classical ruins, shepherds and shepherdesses and their flock

Van Nieulandt was better known as a poet and playwright than as a painter.[13][14] He was a member of the Antwerp chamber of rhetoric the Olyftack (Olive Branch) from 1613 to 1621, transferring to the rival Violieren from 1621 to 1629.[15] His tragedies followed the classical type of tragedies introduced by the Ancient dramatist Seneca and were imbued with the neo-stoic moralist principles which were then very popular among Antwerp's humanist elites. The action in the tragedies was dominated by extreme scenes of horror, including gruesome murders and mutilations. The protagonists were constantly driven by extreme emotions.[2]

In May 1620 he won the prize for best poem at a rhetoric competition in Mechelen, writing under the pen name Dient uwen Al (Serve your All).[16] In May 1624 the Violieren produced his play Aegyptica (a tragedy on the theme of Anthony and Cleopatra).[17]

Literary works edit

Van Nieulandt was better known as a poet and playwright than as a painter.[18][19] He was a member of the Antwerp chamber of rhetoric the Olyftack (Olive Branch) from 1613 to 1621, transferring to the rival Violieren from 1621 to 1629.[20] His tragedies followed the classical type of tragedies introduced by the Ancient dramatist Seneca and were imbued with neo-stoic moralism. The tragedies were driven by extreme scenes of horror, including gruesome murders and mutilations. The protagonists were constantly affected by extreme emotions.[2]

In May 1620 he won the prize for best poem at a rhetoric competition in Mechelen, writing under the pen name Dient uwen Al (Serve your All).[21] In May 1624 the Violieren produced his play Aegyptica (a tragedy on the theme of Anthony and Cleopatra).[22]

 
Title page of Nieulandt's tragedy Sophonisba Aphricana, 1639

Poetry edit

  • Poëma van den Mensch (1621)

Drama edit

  • Livia (1617)
  • Saul (1617)
  • Claudius Domitius Nero (1618)
  • Aegyptica (1624)
  • Sophonisba Aphricana (1626, 1635)
  • Salomon (1628)
  • Jerusalems Verwoestingh door Nabuchodonosor (1635)

Public collections edit

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ As his recurrent signature on paintings was ' G. v. Nieulant' it can be deduced that the correct form of his name is probably Guilliam van Nieulant. He signed his will with ' Giu. v. Nieulandt'. On his literary works he called himself 'van Nieuwelandt'
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Eric Jan Sluijter, Career choices of migrant artists between Amsterdam and Antwerp. The Van Nieulandt brothers, De Zeventiende Eeuw 31 (2015) 1, pp. 101-137
  3. ^ a b c d e f Guilliam van Nieulandt (II) at the Netherlands Institute for Art History
  4. ^ Bredius, Abraham [Ed], Künstlerinventare: Urkunden zur Geschichte der holländischen Kunst des XVIten, XVIIten und XVIIIten Jahrhunderts (Band 1), The Hage, 1915, pp. 177, 183-185 (in German)
  5. ^ Guilliam van Nieulandt (I) at the Netherlands Institute for Art History
  6. ^ Adriaen van Nieulandt at the Netherlands Institute for Art History
  7. ^ Jacob van Nieulandt at the Netherlands Institute for Art History
  8. ^ a b Guiliam Nieulandt biography in De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen (1718) by Arnold Houbraken (in Dutch)
  9. ^ a b Ph. Rombouts and Th. van Lerius, De liggeren en andere historische archieven der Antwerpsche sint Lucasgilde Volume 1, Antwerp, 1864, p. 425, 430, 434, 506
  10. ^ Constancia van Utrecht at the Netherlands Institute for Art History
  11. ^ Anton van Duinkerken, over Guilliam van Nieuwelandt, De Nieuwe Taalgids. Jaargang 54 (1961), pp. 193-197
  12. ^ Willem van Nieulandt the Younger (Antwerp 1585 - ?1635 Amsterdam), Saint Peter’s Square, Rome, with the annual Corpus Christi procession taking place, and Cannons firing a Salute at Johnny van Haeften
  13. ^ Max Rooses, "Guillaume van Nieuwelandt", Biographie Nationale de Belgique, vol. 15 (Brussels, 1899), 718–722
  14. ^ A.A. Keersmaekers, De dichter Guilliam van Nieuwelandt en de Senecaans-Classieke Tragedie in de Zuidelijke Nederlanden (Ghent, 1957).
  15. ^ A. Keersmaekers, "Nieuwelandt, Guilliam van", Nationaal Biografisch Woordenboek, vol. 2 (Brussels, 1966), 629-632
  16. ^ Jan Thieullier, ed., De schadt-kiste der philosophen ende poeten (Mechelen, Henry Jaye, 1621), p. LXX
  17. ^ A. A. Keersmaekers, Geschiedenis van de Antwerpse rederijkerskamers in de jaren 1585–1635 (Aalst, 1952), p. 56.
  18. ^ Max Rooses, "Guillaume van Nieuwelandt", Biographie Nationale de Belgique, vol. 15 (Brussels, 1899), 718–722
  19. ^ A.A. Keersmaekers, De dichter Guilliam van Nieuwelandt en de Senecaans-Classieke Tragedie in de Zuidelijke Nederlanden (Ghent, 1957).
  20. ^ A. Keersmaekers, "Nieuwelandt, Guilliam van", Nationaal Biografisch Woordenboek, vol. 2 (Brussels, 1966), 629-632
  21. ^ Jan Thieullier, ed., De schadt-kiste der philosophen ende poeten (Mechelen, Henry Jaye, 1621), p. LXX
  22. ^ A. A. Keersmaekers, Geschiedenis van de Antwerpse rederijkerskamers in de jaren 1585–1635 (Aalst, 1952), p. 56.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Willem van Nieulandt (II) at Wikimedia Commons

willem, nieulandt, guilliam, willem, nieulandt, nieuwelandt, 1582, 1635, flemish, painter, engraver, poet, playwright, from, antwerp, spent, thirds, career, habsburg, netherlands, remainder, italy, dutch, republic, known, italianate, landscape, paintings, prin. Guilliam or Willem van Nieulandt or van Nieuwelandt 1 1582 84 1635 was a Flemish painter engraver poet and playwright from Antwerp He spent two thirds of his career in the Habsburg Netherlands and the remainder in Italy and the Dutch Republic 2 He is known for his Italianate landscape paintings and prints often real views or capricci of landscapes and buildings from in or around Rome enlivened by contemporary figures or biblical or mythological scenes 3 He is regarded as the principal poet and playwright active in the Habsburg Netherlands in the first three decades of the 17th century 2 Guilliam van Nieulandt IIGuilliam van Nieulandt in Cornelis de Bie s Het Gulden Cabinet BornGuilliam van Nieulandt1584AntwerpDied1635 aged 50 51 AmsterdamNationalityFlemishKnown forPainting poetry stage playsMovementBaroque Contents 1 Biography 2 Artworks 3 Literary oeuvre 4 Literary works 4 1 Poetry 4 2 Drama 5 Public collections 6 Notes and references 7 External linksBiography editHe was born in Antwerp in 1582 or 1584 as the son of Adriaen van Nieulandt the elder died 1603 and Geertruyd Loyson died ca 1627 3 His father was a merchant dealing in quills as was his grandfather who was also admitted as a master of the Guild of Saint Luke of Antwerp in 1573 4 His family included a number of artists such as his uncle Guilliam or Willem van Nieulandt I who was a painter and draftsperson 5 His younger brother Adriaen van Nieulandt the younger born in 1586 in Antwerp became a decorative painter of interiors print artist art dealer appraiser painter and draftsperson and was mainly active in Amsterdam 6 The van Nielandt family moved to Amsterdam in 1589 after the Fall of Antwerp possibly because they were Protestants or simply for economic reasons as Antwerp was suffering the effects of the ongoing war with Holland 2 Another brother called Jacob van Nieulandt was born in 1593 94 in Amsterdam where he became an art dealer painter innkeeper and draftsperson 7 Father van Nieulandt became a poorter of Amsterdam in 1594 which shows that he was of good means 2 nbsp Roman capriccio with the Septizodium the Tomb of Porsenna and the Temple of Vesta According to the early biographer Arnold Houbraken Willem became in 1599 a pupil of Roelant Savery another Flemish emigre living in Amsterdam known for his landscapes still lifes and animal paintings 8 Contemporary art historians have argued that he was not the pupil of Roelant Savery but of his brother Jacob Savery an artist specialised in still lifes animals landscapes en genre paintings 3 In 1601 he travelled to Rome where he worked from 1601 to 1603 in the workshop of his uncle Guilliam van Nieulandt I and later in the workshop of Paul Bril a prominent Flemish landscape painter In the years 1602 and 1603 he lived with his uncle Guilliam van Nieulandt I in the Via Paulina now Via del Babuino in the same house where the Antwerp painter Abraham Janssens was also living 2 3 According to Arnold Houbraken he specialized in Rome in painting artistic ruins of monuments arches and temples many of which he then engraved himself 8 nbsp Jacob Returning to Canaan He returned to the Low Countries in 1604 first residing in Amsterdam 2 On 11 February 1606 the 22 year old Willem married in Amsterdam Anna Hustaert or Huystaert who was a native of Antwerp but had grown up in Amsterdam Willem had ostensibly returned to the Roman Catholic faith during his Roman sojourn but the bans for his marriage in Amsterdam were published in the Reformed Church casting some doubt on the sincerity of his conversion 2 The couple settled in Antwerp In the guild year 1605 1606 he was admitted as a master painter in the Guild of Saint Luke of Antwerp as the son of a master He took in the same year an apprentice by the name of Peerken Hermans 9 On 13 April 1606 he became a citizen of Antwerp His son Adriaen was born in 1607 3 On 26 February 1611 his daughter Constancia or Constantia was baptized in the church which is now Antwerp Cathedral 9 She later married the still life painter Adriaen van Utrecht and was a well regarded poet and still life painter 10 nbsp Adoration of the Magi The violence of the Eighty Years War had caused the decline of Antwerp s chambers of rhetoric rederijkerskamers which staged theatre plays in the city The Twelve Years Truce which established a temporary reprieve from the Eighty Years War from 1609 to 1621 allowed for their revival It is likely that the Antwerp chamber of rhetoric Olyftack Olive Branch commissioned Willem van Nieulandt to assist with the restoration of their meeting room and performance area It paid him for a painting of the Virgin Mary and the renewal of its blazon By the winter of 1615 he had finished his restoration work On 25 September of the same year together with Joan David Heemsen he took the oath as an elder hoofdman of the resurrected chamber of rhetoric and in November the performances of two of his tragedies Livia already completed in March 1614 and Saul written shortly afterwards began He was very successful with these plays which helped revive the Antwerp theatre scene 11 On 22 May 1629 he witnessed in Antwerp the baptism of the first child of his daughter Constantia At some unknown time after this date he returned to Amsterdam were he published his final tragedy in 1635 which he had written in the two years before he left Antwerp He executed a will on 24 October 1635 while he was sick in bed in his home in Amsterdam He signed the will with Giu v Nieulandt Shortly thereafter he died 3 Artworks edit nbsp View of a port with ships engraved by van Nieulandt after design by Paul Bril He created landscape paintings of views in and around Rome most of them capricci of Roman buildings and ruins often including a biblical or mythological scene or shepherds and travellers 2 He had made many sketches of Rome and its surroundings which he used during the rest of his career as backdrops for his paintings and prints While his drawings were detailed and topographically accurate his paintings usually consisted of fanciful capricci of Rome s architectural heritage often placing familiar monuments next to invented structures in imaginary landscapes 12 He was a prolific printmaker who created many etchings of Roman ruins and Italian landscapes that were published in Antwerp under his supervision Some of them were carved after drawings of the brothers Matthijs Bril and Paul Bril Sebastiaen Vrancx and his own drawings 2 One series of 10 etchings of Roman ruins were copied and published by Claes Jansz Visscher in Amsterdam Jan van de Velde and Cornelis Danckert also reproduced some of his etchings in Amsterdam This helped spread his work in the Dutch Republic 2 Literary oeuvre edit nbsp River landscape with classical ruins shepherds and shepherdesses and their flock Van Nieulandt was better known as a poet and playwright than as a painter 13 14 He was a member of the Antwerp chamber of rhetoric the Olyftack Olive Branch from 1613 to 1621 transferring to the rival Violieren from 1621 to 1629 15 His tragedies followed the classical type of tragedies introduced by the Ancient dramatist Seneca and were imbued with the neo stoic moralist principles which were then very popular among Antwerp s humanist elites The action in the tragedies was dominated by extreme scenes of horror including gruesome murders and mutilations The protagonists were constantly driven by extreme emotions 2 In May 1620 he won the prize for best poem at a rhetoric competition in Mechelen writing under the pen name Dient uwen Al Serve your All 16 In May 1624 the Violieren produced his play Aegyptica a tragedy on the theme of Anthony and Cleopatra 17 Literary works editVan Nieulandt was better known as a poet and playwright than as a painter 18 19 He was a member of the Antwerp chamber of rhetoric the Olyftack Olive Branch from 1613 to 1621 transferring to the rival Violieren from 1621 to 1629 20 His tragedies followed the classical type of tragedies introduced by the Ancient dramatist Seneca and were imbued with neo stoic moralism The tragedies were driven by extreme scenes of horror including gruesome murders and mutilations The protagonists were constantly affected by extreme emotions 2 In May 1620 he won the prize for best poem at a rhetoric competition in Mechelen writing under the pen name Dient uwen Al Serve your All 21 In May 1624 the Violieren produced his play Aegyptica a tragedy on the theme of Anthony and Cleopatra 22 nbsp Title page of Nieulandt s tragedy Sophonisba Aphricana 1639 Poetry edit Poema van den Mensch 1621 Drama edit Livia 1617 Saul 1617 Claudius Domitius Nero 1618 Aegyptica 1624 Sophonisba Aphricana 1626 1635 Salomon 1628 Jerusalems Verwoestingh door Nabuchodonosor 1635 Public collections editMusee des Beaux Arts de Tours Tours Museum of Fine Arts Budapest Budapest Norton Museum of Art West Palm Beach Pushkin Museum Moscow Rijksmuseum Amsterdam Royal Museum of Fine Arts AntwerpNotes and references edit As his recurrent signature on paintings was G v Nieulant it can be deduced that the correct form of his name is probably Guilliam van Nieulant He signed his will with Giu v Nieulandt On his literary works he called himself van Nieuwelandt a b c d e f g h i j k l Eric Jan Sluijter Career choices of migrant artists between Amsterdam and Antwerp The Van Nieulandt brothers De Zeventiende Eeuw 31 2015 1 pp 101 137 a b c d e f Guilliam van Nieulandt II at the Netherlands Institute for Art History Bredius Abraham Ed Kunstlerinventare Urkunden zur Geschichte der hollandischen Kunst des XVIten XVIIten und XVIIIten Jahrhunderts Band 1 The Hage 1915 pp 177 183 185 in German Guilliam van Nieulandt I at the Netherlands Institute for Art History Adriaen van Nieulandt at the Netherlands Institute for Art History Jacob van Nieulandt at the Netherlands Institute for Art History a b Guiliam Nieulandt biography in De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen 1718 by Arnold Houbraken in Dutch a b Ph Rombouts and Th van Lerius De liggeren en andere historische archieven der Antwerpsche sint Lucasgilde Volume 1 Antwerp 1864 p 425 430 434 506 Constancia van Utrecht at the Netherlands Institute for Art History Anton van Duinkerken over Guilliam van Nieuwelandt De Nieuwe Taalgids Jaargang 54 1961 pp 193 197 Willem van Nieulandt the Younger Antwerp 1585 1635 Amsterdam Saint Peter s Square Rome with the annual Corpus Christi procession taking place and Cannons firing a Salute at Johnny van Haeften Max Rooses Guillaume van Nieuwelandt Biographie Nationale de Belgique vol 15 Brussels 1899 718 722 A A Keersmaekers De dichter Guilliam van Nieuwelandt en de Senecaans Classieke Tragedie in de Zuidelijke Nederlanden Ghent 1957 A Keersmaekers Nieuwelandt Guilliam van Nationaal Biografisch Woordenboek vol 2 Brussels 1966 629 632 Jan Thieullier ed De schadt kiste der philosophen ende poeten Mechelen Henry Jaye 1621 p LXX A A Keersmaekers Geschiedenis van de Antwerpse rederijkerskamers in de jaren 1585 1635 Aalst 1952 p 56 Max Rooses Guillaume van Nieuwelandt Biographie Nationale de Belgique vol 15 Brussels 1899 718 722 A A Keersmaekers De dichter Guilliam van Nieuwelandt en de Senecaans Classieke Tragedie in de Zuidelijke Nederlanden Ghent 1957 A Keersmaekers Nieuwelandt Guilliam van Nationaal Biografisch Woordenboek vol 2 Brussels 1966 629 632 Jan Thieullier ed De schadt kiste der philosophen ende poeten Mechelen Henry Jaye 1621 p LXX A A Keersmaekers Geschiedenis van de Antwerpse rederijkerskamers in de jaren 1585 1635 Aalst 1952 p 56 External links edit nbsp Media related to Willem van Nieulandt II at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Willem van Nieulandt II amp oldid 1224420379, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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