VICTORS, Jan - b. 1619 Amsterdam, d. 1676 East Indies - WGA

VICTORS, Jan

(b. 1619 Amsterdam, d. 1676 East Indies)

Dutch painter, one of Rembrandt’s lesser known pupils, who joined Rembrandt’s studio around 1635. He was far from being a genius and his life was a hard one. He tried to make a living by giving nurcing assistance to families stricken by the plague, and he died during a voyage to the East Indies where he was hoping to retrieve his fortunes.

His style, compared with that of his contemporaries, was coarse, vulgar and declamatory. He based his genre paintings on stories from the Bible, and he also painted humorous conversation pieces.

Abraham's Parting from the Family of Lot
Abraham's Parting from the Family of Lot by

Abraham's Parting from the Family of Lot

For long time it was thought that the painting represents Jacob and Laban. However, in 1987 the subject was identified as Abraham’s departure for Canaan, leaving his nephew Lot and his family, who will set off for Sodom. This subject from the Genesis is rarely treated in art.

Esau Sells Jacob the Right of Seniority for a Bowl of Lentils
Esau Sells Jacob the Right of Seniority for a Bowl of Lentils by

Esau Sells Jacob the Right of Seniority for a Bowl of Lentils

The painting has a pendant, signed and dated 1653, in the form of a scene depicting Ruth Swearing her Allegiance to Naomi (Book of Ruth, 1: 15-17), now in a private collection in New York.

Esther and Haman before Ahasuerus
Esther and Haman before Ahasuerus by

Esther and Haman before Ahasuerus

Ferryboat
Ferryboat by

Ferryboat

Victors has painted here a typical scene of rural life in a riverside village. The ferryboat carries a peasant and his cattle, so that the huge bulk of a cow stands uneasily in such a small and lightweight craft. The indifferent attitude of the peasant, who leans on the cow, sheep surrounding his feet, indicates that this trip is an everyday necessity. In another boat on the left-hand side a boy teases the ducks in the water’s shallows, much to the amusement of his companion. The painting contrasts the peasants with the horseman on the right-hand side. This man, probably a soldier, is fashionably dressed and groomed, and his horse looks strong and sleek. The peasants, in comparison, wear grubby and worn clothing and the cow looks thin and slightly ungainly. In the painting Victors depicts and contrasts two different aspects of contemporary Dutch society.

Hannah Giving Her Son Samuel to the Priest
Hannah Giving Her Son Samuel to the Priest by

Hannah Giving Her Son Samuel to the Priest

Jacob Being Shown Joseph's Robe
Jacob Being Shown Joseph's Robe by

Jacob Being Shown Joseph's Robe

While he did paint portraits and secular subjects, Victors became best known for his grandiose and eloquent portrayals of Biblical subjects, most often drawn from the Old Testament.

Jacob Despairing over Joseph's Robes
Jacob Despairing over Joseph's Robes by

Jacob Despairing over Joseph's Robes

Religious paintings constitute a significant part of Victors oeuvre. The artist only painted scenes from the Old Testament, which distinguishes him from the contemporary Dutch painters who, although as Protestants, more often undertook the Old Testament theme, but did not give up completely from the Christological themes. The painter was more interested in the didactic pronunciation of the work than its artistic value; he calls to mind Pieter Lastman, who, apart from Rembrandt and Govert Flinck, had perhaps the greatest influence on his art.

Market Scene with a Quack at his Stall
Market Scene with a Quack at his Stall by

Market Scene with a Quack at his Stall

This painting was painted about 1650 but the style and manner of presentation are those of an earlier period. This was the beginning of the great period of middle-class genre painting when artists were developing a style quite different from Victor’s over-familiar anecdotical approach.

The market-place is in fact limited to the quack’s table with an awning over it, and the group of simple people crowding round the stall. The church and houses round the market-square are outlined behind the group of onlookers and the village street with figures can be seen in the distance. The peasant sitting barefooted, one of his shoes discarded beside him, the charlatan in his finery, and the colourful company of villagers around them are characters in an anecdotical story which is indeed worthy of the painter’s brush. Victors was a pupil of Rembrandt, and his figures are clearly derivative but they are smooth and superficial compared with the character studies of the great master.

Peasants' Meal at the Stables
Peasants' Meal at the Stables by

Peasants' Meal at the Stables

Portrait of a Man as a Turkish Prince
Portrait of a Man as a Turkish Prince by

Portrait of a Man as a Turkish Prince

The present portrait is actually a so-called ‘portrait histori�’, a real portrait of a sitter shown as a historic figure, in this case as Jonathan. The biblical figure of Jonathan is described in the Bible, in the Old Testament, in book 1 of Samuel. He was the son of King Saul and a close friend of King David.

Ruth Swearing her Allegiance to Naomi
Ruth Swearing her Allegiance to Naomi by

Ruth Swearing her Allegiance to Naomi

The subject is taken from the Book of Ruth in the Old Testament. Naomi of Bethlehem was the Moabite Ruth’s mother-in-law.

The painting is a pendant to a painting in the Muzeum £azienki Kr�lewskie, Warsaw. It is signed and dated top right: J . Victors / 1653.

The Banquet of Esther and Ahasuerus
The Banquet of Esther and Ahasuerus by

The Banquet of Esther and Ahasuerus

Calvinist collectors in the Dutch Republic were often especially interested in Old Testament paintings, as Calvin has advocated careful study of the biblical narrative. Jan Victors, who painted mostly Old Testament scenes, apparently made them primarily for Calvinist patrons. His large pictures of Old Testament subjects are distinctly related to Rembrandt’s biblical pictures done after the mid-thirties; his paintings of tradesmen and rural genre scenes are more personal.

In this scene the Jewish heroine Esther, wife of the Persian King Ahasuerus, notifies her husband of the plans of his advisor Haman, here seen at left, who has schemed to massacre the Jews in the Persian empire.

Town Folk Coming to the Country
Town Folk Coming to the Country by

Town Folk Coming to the Country

In this genre scene Jan Victors depicts the jovial community spirit of Dutch rural life. He contrasts the elegant formality of the townsfolk to the humble earthiness of the villagers.

Young Woman at a Window
Young Woman at a Window by

Young Woman at a Window

Feedback