Catalogue entry no. 5 by Susan Anderson:
Gerrit Berckheyde specialized in painted city views and landscapes of Germany, Italy, and the Netherlands after studying at the knee of his brother, the architectural painter Job Berckheyde. Before entering Haarlem’s Guild of Saint Luke in 1660, Gerrit traveled with Job along the Rhine in Germany, at which time both gained employment and esteem from Charles Louis, Elector Palatine. After his return to Haarlem, Gerrit participated in an artists’ collegia, an informal group who drew from live models. The circle included his closest stylistic compatriot, Cornelis Bega (25.1998.93), and likely Leendert van der Cooghen (1951.3), as well as Dirck Helmbreeker and others.
Peter Schatborn initially attributed five drawings to Berckheyde, based on either their relationships to his paintings or early inscriptions bearing his name. Using stylistic comparisons with the drawings on Schatborn’s list, Mary Ann Scott then tentatively expanded the tally to thirty-three drawings as by Berckheyde or his circle. The group consists of figure studies, mostly of women, in black or red chalk. According to Schatborn, Berckheyde’s figure studies may be differentiated from those of Bega (under whose name they have often traveled) by their looser, sketchier style, their even tonality, and their tidily drawn, sausagelike hands. Scott further notes Berckheyde’s interest in comfortable postures; his scrupulous depiction of faces and hands and gentle handling of chalk; and the frequent presence of a prop, such as a seat or the footwarmer shown here, to balance the composition.
Bega and Berckheyde are known to have shared models. In this sheet, the “Amsterdam model” makes an appearance, recognizable by her full, youthful face and so called by Scott because of her first appearance in a tavern scene by Bega of circa 1660 (now in the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam). Bega depicted her again twice in 1662, further refining the date for our sheet. The Harvard drawing also includes a popular costume featuring a turbaned headdress and horizontally banded bodice, shown here on the model, who is seated facing right. The same model, standing, wears this costume again in a drawing in Amsterdam (Fig. 1). In both cases, Berckheyde drew her from the same viewpoint, slightly below and to the right. As William W. Robinson and Pieter Roelofs have noted, this dress appears in other figure studies by a variety of similar hands. Closest to our sheet is one by an anonymous artist, portraying the figure in almost the same seated pose as our drawing, but from a vantage point slightly farther right (Fig. 2), implying that Berckheyde and others executed these sheets while seated next to one another during the same session.
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