
David Teniers the Younger
David Teniers the Younger
(December 15, 1610 –
April 25, 1690), a
Flemish artist born
in Antwerp
, was the
more celebrated son of David
Teniers the Elder, almost ranking in celebrity with Rubens and Van
Dyck. His son
David Teniers
III and his grandson David Teniers IV were also painters. His
wife Anna née, Anna Breughel was the daughter of
Jan Brueghel the Elder and the
granddaughter of
Pieter Bruegel
the Elder.
Biography
Through his father, he was indirectly influenced by
Elsheimer and by
Rubens. The influence of
Adriaen Brouwer can be traced to the outset
of his career. There is no evidence, however, that either Rubens or
Brouwer interfered in any way with Teniers's education, and Smith
(
Catalogue Raisonné) may be correct in supposing that the
admiration which Brouwer's pictures at one time excited alone
suggested to the younger artist his imitation of them. The only
trace of personal relations having existed between Teniers and
Rubens is the fact that the ward of the latter, Anne Breughel, the
daughter of Jan (Velvet) Breughel, married Teniers in 1637.
Early work
Admitted as a "master" in the
Guild of
St Luke in 1632, Teniers had even before this made the public
acquainted with his works. The Berlin Museum possesses a group of
ladies and gentlemen dated 1630. No special signature positively
distinguishes these first productions from those of his father, and
we do not think it correct to admit with some writers that he first
painted religious subjects. Dr. Bode, in a remarkable study of
Brouwer and his works, expresses the opinion that Teniers's
earliest pictures are those found under the signature "Tenier."
"Tenier"
is a Flemish version of a thoroughly Walloon name, "Taisnier" which the painter's
grandfather, a mercer, brought with him when
he came from Ath
in 1558; and Dr. Bode's supposition is greatly
strengthened by the circumstance that not only David the elder but
his brother Abraham and his four sons were all inscribed as
"Tenier" in the ledgers of the Antwerp guild of St
Luke.
Some really first-rate works--the
Prodigal Son and a group
of
Topers in the Munich Gallery, as well as a party of
gentlemen and ladies at dinner, termed the
Five Senses, in
the Brussels Museum--with the above signature are remarkable
instances of the perfection attained by the artist when he may be
supposed to have been scarcely twenty. His touch is of the rarest
delicacy, his colour at once gay and harmonious. Waagen and Smith
agree that the works painted from 1645 to 1650 testify most highly
to the master's abilities; there is no doubt that a considerable
number of earlier productions would have been sufficient to
immortalize his name.
He was
little over thirty when the Antwerp guild of St. George enabled him
to paint the marvellous picture which ultimately found its way to
the Hermitage
in St.
Petersburg
the
Meeting of the Civic Guards. Correct to the
minutest detail, yet striking in effect, the scene, under the rays
of glorious sunshine, displays an astonishing amount of acquired
knowledge and natural good taste.
This painting leads us to mention another
work of the same year (1643), now in the National
Gallery, London
, The Village Fete (or La fete aux
chaudrons) (No. 952), an equally beautiful repetition
of which, dated 1646, belongs to the duke of Bedford.
Truth in
physiognomy, distribution of
groups, the beautiful effect of light and shade, command our
warmest admiration. A work like this, according to Waagen, stamps
its author as the greatest among painters of his class. Frankness
in expression and freedom in attitude guided his preference in the
choice of a model, but we may suppose him occasionally to have
exaggerated both. He seems anxious to have it known that, far from
indulging in the coarse amusements of the boors he is fond of
painting, he himself lives in good style, looks like a gentleman,
and behaves as such. He never seems tired of showing the turrets of
his chateau of Perck, and in the midst of rustic merry-makings we
often see his family and himself received cap in hand by the joyous
peasants. We may also observe that he has a certain number of
favorite models, the constant recurrence of whom is a special
feature of his works.
We have even met them in a series of
life-size portrait-like figures in the Doria Pamphilj
Gallery
in Rome.
Maturity
Teniers was chosen by the common council of Antwerp to preside over
the guild of painters in 1644. The
Archduke Leopold
Wilhelm, who had assumed the government of the
Spanish Netherlands, being a great lover
of art, employed Teniers not only as a painter but as keeper of the
collection of pictures he was then forming. With the rank and title
of "ayuda de camara," Teniers took up his abode in Brussels shortly
after 1647. Immense sums were spent in the acquisition of paintings
for the archduke. A number of valuable works of the Italian
masters, now in the Vienna Museum, came from Leopold's gallery
after having belonged to
Charles
I and the
Duke of Buckingham.
De Bie (1661) states that Teniers was some time in London,
collecting pictures for the Duke of Fuensaldana, then acting as
Leopold's lieutenant in the Netherlands. Paintings in Madrid,
Munich, Vienna and Brussels have enabled art critics to form an
opinion of what the imperial residence was at the time of Leopold,
who is represented as conducted by Teniers and admiring some recent
acquisition. No picture in the gallery is omitted, every one being
inscribed with a number and the name of its author, so that the
ensemble of these paintings might serve as an illustrated inventory
of the collection. Still more interesting is a canvas, now in the
Munich Gallery, where we see Teniers at work in a room of the
palace, with an old peasant as a model and several gentlemen
looking on.
When
Leopold returned to Vienna
, Teniers's
task ceased; in fact, the pictures also travelled to Austria
, and a
Flemish priest, himself a first-rate flower painter, Van der Baren,
became keeper of the archducal gallery. Teniers nevertheless
remained in high favor with the new governor-general,
Don Juan of Austria, a natural
son of
Philip IV of Spain. The
prince was his pupil, and de Bie tells us he painted the likeness
of the painter's son.
David Teniers the Younger was honoured as one of the greatest
painters in Europe. Shortly after the death of his wife in 1656, he
married Isabella de Fren, daughter of the secretary of the council
of Brabant, and strove his utmost to prove his right to armorial
bearings. In a petition to the king he reminded him that the honour
of knighthood had been bestowed upon Rubens and Van Dyck. The king
at last declared his readiness to grant the request, but on the
express condition that Teniers should give up selling his pictures.
The condition was not complied with; but it may perhaps account for
his interest in founding an academy in Antwerp strictly limited to
painters and sculptors. (The venerable Guild of St. Luke made no
difference between art and handicraft: carvers, gilders,
bookbinders, stood on an even footing with painters and sculptors:
which separation was not made until 1773.) There were great
rejoicings in Antwerp when, on 26 January 1663, Teniers came from
Brussels with the royal charter creating the
Antwerp Royal
Academy of Fine Arts, the existence of which was due entirely
to his personal initiative.
Death
Teniers died in Brussels on 25 April 1690. The date is often
wrongly given as 1694 or 1695. A picture in the Munich Gallery (No.
906), dated 1680, represents him as an
alchemist, oppressed with a burden of age beyond his
years. From this date, more is documented of his doings as a
picture-dealer than as a painter, which most probably gave birth to
the legend of his having given himself out as deceased in order to
get higher prices for his works. David, his eldest son, a painter
of talent and reputation, had died in 1685. One of this third
Teniers's pictures--"St Dominic Kneeling before the Blessed
Virgin," dated 1666--is still to be found in the church at Perck.
As well as his father, he contributed many patterns to the
celebrated Brussels tapestry
looms.
Legacy
Smith's
Catalogue Raisonné gives descriptions of over 900
paintings accepted as original productions of Teniers. Few artists
ever worked with greater ease, and some of his smaller pictures,
landscapes with figures, have been termed "afternoons", not from
their subjects, but from the time spent in producing them. The
museums in Madrid, St Petersburg, Vienna, Munich, Dresden, Paris,
London and Brussels have more than 200 pictures by Teniers. In the
United Kingdom, 150 may be found in private hands, and many other
examples are to be met with in private collections throughout
Europe. Although the spirit of many of these works is as a whole
marvellous, their conscientiousness must be regarded as
questionable. Especially in the later productions, from 1654
onwards we often detect a lack of earnestness and of the calm and
concentrated study of nature which alone prevent expression from
degenerating into grimace in situations like those generally
depicted by Teniers.
Influences
His education, and still more his real and assumed position in
society, to a great degree account for this. Brouwer knew more of
taverns; Ostade was more thoroughly at home in cottages and humble
dwellings; Teniers, throughout, triumphs in broad daylight, and,
though many of his interiors may be justly termed masterpieces,
they seldom equal his open-air scenes, where he has, without
constraint, given full play to the bright resources of his luminous
palette. In this respect, he often suggests comparisons with
Watteau. But his subjects taken from the
Gospels or sacred legend are absurd. An admirable picture in the
Louvre shows
Peter Denying his Master next to a table
where soldiers are smoking and having a game at cards. A similar
example is the
Deliverance of St Peter from Prison of
which two versions, curiously altered, are in the Dresden Gallery
and the Wallace Collection. He likes going back to subjects
illustrated two centuries before by
Jerom Bosch--the
Temptation of St
Anthony, the
Rich Man in Hell, incantations and
witches for the simple purpose of assembling the most comic
apparitions. His villagers drink, play bowls, dance and sing; they
seldom quarrel or fight, and, if they do, seem to be shamming. This
much may be said of Teniers, that no painter shows a more enviable
ability to render a conception to his own and other people's
satisfaction. His works have a technical freshness, a
straightforwardness in means and intent, which make the study of
them most delightful; as
Sir Joshua
Reynolds says, they are worthy of the closest attention of any
painter who desires to excel in the mechanical knowledge of his
art.
As an etcher, Teniers compares very unfavourably with
Ostade,
Bega and
Dusart. More than 500 plates were
made from his pictures; and, if it be true that Louis XIV judged
his "baboons" (
magots) unworthy of a place in the royal
collections, they found admirable engravers in France--
Le Bas and his scholars--and
passionate admirers. The duke of Bedford's admirable specimen was
sold for 18,030 livres (£1860) in 1768. The
Prodigal Son,
now in the Louvre, fetched 30,000 livres (£3095) in 1776. Smith's
highest estimates have long since been greatly exceeded. The
Archers in St Petersburg he gives as worth £2000. The
Belgian government gave £5000 in 1867 for the
Village
Pastoral of 1652, which is now in the Brussels Museum; and a
picture of the
Prodigal Son, scarcely 16 by 28 inches,
fetched £5280 in 1876.
Although
van Tilborgh, who was a
scholar of Teniers in Brussels, followed his style with some
success, and later painters often excelled in figure-painting on a
small scale, Teniers cannot be said to have formed a school.
Properly speaking, he is the last representative of the great
Flemish traditions of the 17th century.
References
Sources
- John Smith, A Catalogue
Raisonné of the Works of the most Eminent Dutch, Flemish and
French Painters, London: Smith and Son, 1829-42.
- John Vermoelen, , Paris: J.B. Dumoulin, 1870.
- L Galesloot, " " (no publication information)
- L Galesloot, " " in Messager des sciences historiques.
Ghent: Léonard Hebbelynck, 1868.
- Alph. Wauters, , Brussels: Ch. Vanderauwera, 1855.
- Alphonse Guillaume Ghislain Wauters, , Brussels: F. Hayez,
1881.
- Frans Jozef van den Branden, , Antwerp: J.-E. Buschmann,
1883.
- Max Rooses, , Munich: T. Riedel, 1881.
- Wilhelm Bode, " " in Die Grafische Künste VI, 1884,
pp. 21-72.
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