BIJLERT, Jan van - b. ~1597 Utrecht, d. 1671 Utrecht - WGA

BIJLERT, Jan van

(b. ~1597 Utrecht, d. 1671 Utrecht)

Jan Harmensz. van Bijlert (also spelt Bylert), Dutch painter. He was the son of the Utrecht glass painter Herman Beerntsz. van Bijlert and Elisabeth Willemsdr van Laeckervelt. Jan must have trained first with his father but was later apprenticed to the painter Abraham Bloemaert. After his initial training, he visited France and travelled to Italy, as did other artists from Utrecht.

Jan stayed mainly in Rome, where he became a member of the Schildersbent; he is recorded in Rome in 1621 as ‘Giovanni Bilardo’, but was known as ‘Aeneas’ by the bentveugels, the Dutch painters working in Italy.

In Rome he and the other Utrecht artists had come under the influence of the work of Caravaggio; after their return home, this group of painters, who became known as the Utrecht Caravaggisti, adapted the style of Caravaggio to their own local idiom. The Caravaggesque style, evident in van Bijlert’s early paintings, such as St Sebastian Tended by Irene (1624; Rohrau, Schloss) and The Matchmaker (1626; Brunswick, Herzog Anton Ulrich-Museum), is characterized by the use of strong chiaroscuro, the cutting off of the picture plane so that the image is seen close-up and by an attempt to achieve a realistic rather than idealized representation. Van Bijlert returned to Utrecht in 1624 and continued to paint in this style throughout the 1620s, a particularly productive period.

Bijlert returned to Utrecht in 1625 and became a prominent figure in the artists’ guild there. He painted history scenes, genre subjects and portraits. He had a predilection for simple, life-size half figures and regularly painted both formal and allegorical portraits.

He was married in Amsterdam in 1625, on which occasion he gave his age as twenty-seven. In 1630, he became a member of the Reformed church. In 1630, Jan van Bijlert joined the Guild of St Luke in Utrecht; he was appointed dean of the guild from 1632 to 1637. His pupils included Bertram de Fouchier (1609-1673), Abraham Willaerts and Ludolph de Jongh. Rather surprisingly, the marine painter Willaerts later moved to Paris to study under the celebrated French master Simon Vouet.

In 1634, Jan van Bijlert joined the brotherhood of the Sint Jobsgasthuis, where he was housemaster in 1642-1643. He was married several times after the death of his first wife, lastly to Cecilia van Gelove, the widow of a house painter and paint merchant. Van Bijlert continued to serve on the board of the guild, as dean in 1654 and as headman in 1655 and again in the period from 1667 to 1670. He died in 1671 and was buried in the Nicolaaskerk on 13 November of that year.

A Woman Holding Pancakes
A Woman Holding Pancakes by

A Woman Holding Pancakes

Allegory of the Sense of Smell
Allegory of the Sense of Smell by

Allegory of the Sense of Smell

The subject depicted is almost certainly an allegory of smell. The dog, an animal known for its acute sense of smell, leaps into the lap of the nude towards the rose which strains on its stem as it blooms, suggestive of a heady perfume. The painting likely formed part of a series of the Five Senses.

Bagpipe Player
Bagpipe Player by

Bagpipe Player

It has been suggested that this panel may be the pendant to Bijlert’s signed Girl with a Cat, now in the Walters Art Museum, Baltimore. The sitter in the Baltimore picture is depicted in a similar format and faces left, mirroring the present figure.

The panel is signed upper right corner: J Bijlert. fe:

Girl Teasing a Cat
Girl Teasing a Cat by

Girl Teasing a Cat

A child teasing a cat is a frequent subject in Dutch art; it refers to the idea that (sexual) teasing can lead to a painful scratching. That this mischievous girl is partially disrobed makes the consequences more obvious and erotic-since her bared skin teases the viewer as well. Her voluptuousness and apparent cheerfulness suggest a brothel, not the everyday life of children.

Van Bijlert, a leading master in Utrecht, owes his sensual treatment of the human body to the influence of his teacher Abraham Bloemaert and the paintings by the great Italian master Caravaggio that he saw while in Rome (1621-2425), such as the latter’s melancholic, starkly sensual The Musicians,” from which he apparently adapted the shoulder and arm of the boy at the right.

Music-making Company
Music-making Company by

Music-making Company

Bijlert was one of the Utrecht Caravaggisti who painted small, cabinet scale pictures on wooden support for Dutch clientele. In this conversation piece he created a harmonious ensemble of the musicians.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 5 minutes):

Biagio Marini: Sonata in echo

Musical Company
Musical Company by

Musical Company

The subject was popular in 17th-century Dutch painting.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 5 minutes):

Biagio Marini: Sonata in echo

Portrait of an Unknown Man
Portrait of an Unknown Man by

Portrait of an Unknown Man

When Jan van Bijlert and other Utrecht artists, such as Gerard van Honthorst, Hendrick Terbrugghen and Dirck van Baburen traveled to Rome in the early 1600s, they brought back a style that significantly transformed the art of their native town. These artists, known collectively as the Utrecht Caravaggisti, were greatly influenced by Caravaggio’s use of chiaroscuro which dominated Italian painting in the early seventeenth century and had an extensive impact throughout Europe.

In 1624, van Bijlert brought his Caravaggesque manner back to his native city of Utrecht. By the 1630s, however, he adopted a more classicising style, strongly influenced by his Dutch contemporary, Gerard van Honthorst, as well as Simon Vouet. The present portrait belongs to this later period of the artist’s career. Although highly speculative, it might be a portrayal of the Dutch poet and physician, Jacob Westerbaen (1599-1670).

Shepherd Holding a Flute
Shepherd Holding a Flute by

Shepherd Holding a Flute

Like many other Utrecht artists of his time, Jan van Bijlert incorporated Caravaggesque features in many of his genre-, historical- and pastoral scenes. In this he was mostly influenced by Gerrit van Honthorst, who, together with Hendrick Terbrugghen and Dirck van Baburen, introduced Caravaggism to Utrecht around 1620.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 15 minutes):

Johann Sebastian Bach: Sonata in A Major for flute and cembalo obligato, BWV 1032

Shepherdess
Shepherdess by

Shepherdess

The artist was a prolific painter of pastoral scenes, all representing shepherds and shepherdesses as single half-length figures or in narrative representations. The present painting shows a shepherdess, half-length, wearing a large blue hat decorated with an iris and holding a staff. It is a characteristic example of what is described as Utrecht Caravaggism.

The painting has a pendant representing a shepherd with a flute (private collection).

The Concert
The Concert by

The Concert

Dutch painter, who studied with Abraham Bloemaert then left for Italy in 1621. He returned to Utrecht, his native city, from Italy by 1624. He arrived as a confirmed Caravaggist relying heavily on the Italian master’s strong chiaroscuro effects, but by the early thirties, like most Utrecht painters, he adopted a classical manner and a lighter palette.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 10 minutes):

Claudio Monteverdi: Charming Angioletta, madrigal

Ulysses and Circe
Ulysses and Circe by

Ulysses and Circe

The present painting depicts an episode from the Odyssey (Bk 10). On their journey home after the Trojan War, Ulysses and his companions came upon the island of the sorceress, Circe. With a magic potion, she transformed the men into swine; however Ulysses, having been forewarned by Mercury and having taken an antidote, was able to resist her magic. The present painting depicts the moment when Circe lifts her wand to touch Ulysses and activate the spell.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 13 minutes):

Claudio Monteverdi: Il ritorno d’Ulisse, Act I, Duet of Odysseus and Pallas Athene

Venus and Amor and an Old Woman
Venus and Amor and an Old Woman by

Venus and Amor and an Old Woman

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 4 minutes):

Francesco Gasparini: The Meddlesome Cupid, aria

Virgin and Child
Virgin and Child by

Virgin and Child

The refined manner of painting, the pale flesh tones and the powerful colour contrasts make the work a paradigm of classicist painting. It is therefore not surprising that it was attributed to the French artist Simon Vouet from the early 1700s until well into the 20th century. Van Bijlert had lived in Rome from 1621 to 1624, and would certainly have met the celebrated Simon Vouet there. The composition and colours of Van Bijlert’s Virgin and Child seem to be strongly influenced by Vouet.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 6 minutes):

Franz Schubert: Ave Maria (Hail, Mary), Franz Liszt’s transcription

Young Girl Holding a Letter
Young Girl Holding a Letter by

Young Girl Holding a Letter

This painting, treating a subject very popular in Dutch seventeenth-century genre painting, had a companion piece (now lost) depicting a soldier with a feathered hat.

Young Man Drinking a Glass of Wine
Young Man Drinking a Glass of Wine by

Young Man Drinking a Glass of Wine

The painting is signed upper right.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 5 minutes):

Otto Nicolai: Die lustigen Weiber von Windsor (The Merry Wives of Windsor), drinking song

Young Man Playing the Lute
Young Man Playing the Lute by

Young Man Playing the Lute

Bijlert was connected with the Utrecht circle of Caravaggists, who included Honthorst and Terbrugghen, and like them spent time in Rome around 1621. The present painting has been dated to roughly that period, although it is not a documented work and must therefore be considered as attributed to Bijlert.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 2 minutes):

Francesco da Milano: Tre fantasie for lute

Young Woman Playing with a Cat
Young Woman Playing with a Cat by

Young Woman Playing with a Cat

This painting likely portrays a courtesan. She is seen in a state of deshabill�, with her hair decorated in fine jewels and feathers, her face heavily made-up, and plays with a cat, an animal that in both art and literature of the time had erotic connotations. The cat here takes the place of the more-commonly used lute, amongst the Utrecht Caravaggisti, to signify lust.

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