VINCKBOONS, David - b. 1576 Mechelen, d. ~1633 Amsterdam - WGA

VINCKBOONS, David

(b. 1576 Mechelen, d. ~1633 Amsterdam)

Flemish-born painter, active in Amsterdam. He painted landscapes and genre scenes and is a transitional figure between the decorative and imaginative Mannerist tradition and the more naturalistic style associated with 17th-century Dutch painting. His early genre pictures depicting village festivals reveal the influence of Pieter Bruegel, and Vinckboons is credited with introducing some of his motifs into Holland. It has been asserted that Vinckboons’s works can always be identified by the presence of a finch (‘vinck’) in a tree (‘boom’), but the painstaking student usually finds that the bird has flown.

A Blind Hurdy-Gurdy Player
A Blind Hurdy-Gurdy Player by

A Blind Hurdy-Gurdy Player

This composition was engraved by Claes Jansz. Visscher with a text referring to an avaricious peasant, called Jorden, who is being pick-pocketed by a child, named, Gauwert while listening to the hurdy-gurdy player.

An Officer Preparing His Troops for an Ambush
An Officer Preparing His Troops for an Ambush by

An Officer Preparing His Troops for an Ambush

Blind Hurdy-Gurdy Player
Blind Hurdy-Gurdy Player by

Blind Hurdy-Gurdy Player

The painting depicts a blind hurdy-gurdy player, led by a dog. He travels through a village followed by a large group of children. On the left a begging old woman, on the right pancakes are baked.

Distribution of Loaves to the Poor
Distribution of Loaves to the Poor by

Distribution of Loaves to the Poor

A leading figure in the transition from Mannerist tradition to the new realism in genre painting was David Vinckboons, one of the most popular and prolific painters and print designers of his time. Good proof of Vinckboons’ debt to Bruegel is the debate which scholars still hold about whether some pictures should be attributed to Pieter Brueghel the Younger, whose art was a shadow of his great father’s, or to Vinckboons.

Vinckboon’s family had settled in Amsterdam by the time he was fifteen years old, and he apparently spent the rest of his life in Holland. His work indicate that he had contact with Gillis van Coninxloo, the gifted Flemish landscape painter, who also emigrated to Amsterdam. Vinckboons was one of the artists who helped to forge the new landscape style, but toward the end of his career his interest in the activities of men and women increased. His genre pictures range from early multicoloured ones of large crowds strolling through gardens and Bruegel-like kermis scenes, to those made in the last years of his life which show a close view of a single couple in a landscape.

Elderly Fisherman with a Girl
Elderly Fisherman with a Girl by

Elderly Fisherman with a Girl

In Dutch literature, fishing conveyed a variety of conflicting sexual associations ranging from impotence to coitus. In the visual arts, the pastime (which is mostly depicted in book illustrations) likewise connotes carnality. Such is the case with this drawing, in which an elderly yokel and his much younger companion both reach for worms conspicuously located in a box between his legs; clearly their interests extends well beyond angling.

Elegant Party in an Ornate Palace Garden
Elegant Party in an Ornate Palace Garden by

Elegant Party in an Ornate Palace Garden

In the magnificent gardens of a country palace a group of young and fashionable figures have assembled for a banquet beneath the trees. It is an early example of fête galantes painted in the Netherlands in the early seventeenth century that would prove hugely influential on Dutch painting, especially in Haarlem, for a generation or more. Esias van de Velde, Willem Buytewech and Dirck Hals, were, for example, all directly influenced by Vinckboons’s examples.

Extensive Landscape
Extensive Landscape by

Extensive Landscape

The painting is attributed to the artist on stylistic ground.

Forest Landscape with Two of Christ's Miracles
Forest Landscape with Two of Christ's Miracles by

Forest Landscape with Two of Christ's Miracles

This is a fine example of a forest landscape by Vinckboons. He produced similar compositions in other forest landscapes in the first decade of the seventeenth century. These landscapes respond strongly to forest scenes by Gillis van Coninxloo, who worked in Amsterdam from 1595 until his death.

In the present painting the story of Jairus’s daughter and the woman who touches Jesus’s garment is illustrated. Christ and the Apostles have crossed over the Sea of Galilee, enduring a great storm, to the land of the Gadarenes. Christ sets off to Jairus’s house. Among the crowd following him is a woman who has had an “issue of blood twelve years.” She touches Christ’s garment and is immediately healed. This miracle is shown on the of the canvas. Two distant sailboats in the central background indicate the crossing over the Sea of Galilee.

Formerly, this panel was in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. It was sold for the Acquisitions Fund in 2013.

Forest Landscape with Two of Christ's Miracles (detail)
Forest Landscape with Two of Christ's Miracles (detail) by

Forest Landscape with Two of Christ's Miracles (detail)

In the present painting the story of Jairus’s daughter and the woman who touches Jesus’s garment is illustrated. Christ and the Apostles have crossed over the Sea of Galilee, enduring a great storm, to the land of the Gadarenes. Christ sets off to Jairus’s house. Among the crowd following him is a woman who has had an “issue of blood twelve years.” She touches Christ’s garment and is immediately healed. This miracle is shown on the of the canvas.

Forest Scene with Robbery
Forest Scene with Robbery by

Forest Scene with Robbery

David Vinckboons together with Roelandt Savery introduced landscape painting in Amsterdam and Utrecht.

This painting was executed in collaboration with Sebastian Vranckx.

Kermis
Kermis by

Kermis

Vinckboons was responsive to Pieter Bruegel’s peasant imagery, especially his depictions of peasant fairs and related festivities. This theme was enormously popular during the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries and was (and still is) generally known by its Dutch title, Kermis.

Vinckboons’s Kermis of around 1605 is an outstanding representation of this theme, one of many he produced during his three-decade career. The picture shows peasant merrymaking in connection with the feast day of St George, who is portrayed on the banner hanging from the ramshackle building at the right. The peasant figures of the painting urinate, drink, and vomit with wild abandon.

Music-making Company in the Open
Music-making Company in the Open by

Music-making Company in the Open

The Flemish Vinckboons, who emigrated from Antwerp to Amsterdam, introduced a Flemish subject, the conversation piece, into Dutch painting. The present painting is an example of this genre.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 5 minutes):

Giovanni Gabrieli: Canzon a Duodecimi Toni

Peasant Feast
Peasant Feast by

Peasant Feast

The painter portrays the wide variety of festivities taking place in this revelrous Peasant Feast. As is typical with Dutch and Flemish feast scenes, this highly animated composition is interspersed with more grotesque passages, including a man becoming sick at the table in back.

The painting is signed in monogram and dated upper right: DvB 1606.

Sermon of Christ at the Lake Genezareth
Sermon of Christ at the Lake Genezareth by

Sermon of Christ at the Lake Genezareth

Tavern Interior
Tavern Interior by

Tavern Interior

This painting depicts a tavern interior with men and women eating and drinking whilst children and animals play and a man begs alms. It belongs to a series of small panels of similar subjects painted by Vinckboons around 1606-10, which are generally interpreted as depicting Spanish soldiers feasting and oppressing Dutch peasants.

Village Kermesse
Village Kermesse by

Village Kermesse

Like Vinckboons’s other early works, the scene is constructed as a birds-eye panorama showing a lively village kermesse, the traditional church festival celebrated in the Low Countries. Such peasant subjects originated with Pieter Bruegel the Elder and constituted a major part of Vinckboons’ oeuvre.

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