Abraham Teniers
Abraham Teniers (1 March 1629 – 26 September 1670) was a member of the Flemish artist family Teniers who specialized in genre paintings of villages, inns and monkey scenes.[1]
Life
Abraham Teniers was born in Antwerp on 1 March 1629 as the son of the prominent genre painter David Teniers the Elder and Dymphna Cornelisse de Wilde.[2] Three of his brothers were also painters: David the Younger (1610–90) who became the most successful of the Teniers painting dynasty, Juliaan III (1616–79) and Theodoor (1619–97).[3] Abraham Teniers likely trained with his father and older brother David.[1][4] He was admitted as a ‘wijnmeester’ (i.e. son of a master) in the Antwerp Guild of Saint Luke in 1646.[1]
Abraham married Isabelle de Roore on 16 July 1644. He was a member of the local Schutterij (militia).[2] He was active in the local Chamber of rhetoric called the 'Olyftack' ('Olive branch') where he was received as a captain in 1660.[5]
Like his brother David before him, Abraham found appreciation at the court in Brussels and the art-loving Archduke Leopold Wilhelm of Austria – then the governor of the Southern Netherlands and a resident of Brussels – appointed him as court painter.[4]
Abraham died in Antwerp.[1]
Work
General
Abraham Teniers is mainly known for his genre scenes which depict themes and are executed in a style not dissimilar to those of his father and brother David who are his presumed teachers.
Guardroom Scenes
If the attributions by the Prado Museum are correct, Abraham painted two Guardroom Scenes now held in the collection of the Prado Museum.[4][6] A guardroom scene is a type of genre scene that became popular in the mid-17th century, particularly in the Dutch Republic. In Flanders there were also a few practitioners of the genre including David Teniers the Younger, Anton Goubau, Cornelis Mahu and Jan Baptist Tijssens the Younger.
A guardroom scene typically depicts an interior scene with officers and soldiers engaged in merrymaking. Guardroom scenes often included mercenaries and prostitutes dividing booty, harassing captives or indulging in other forms of reprehensible activities.[7] The first Guardroom Scene attributed to Abraham Teniers depicts a guardroom with a black servant and a pile of weapons, a saddle and a war standard in the foreground and some soldiers gathering around a fire in the background.
In the second Guardroom Scene attributed to Abraham Teniers the guardroom is dominated by the jumble of disjointed metal armours, breast plates, a drum, weaponry and helmets in the foreground while the peasant soldiers smoking a pipe or drinking in front of a fireplace are kept in the shadows in the background of the picture. The armour depicted in the two pictures was already out of date at the time it was painted since metal armours, breast plates and helmets fell out of use from the 1620s.[8] It is possible that in line with the moralizing intent of the genre, the armour is a reference to the vanitas motif of the transience of power and fame.[9]
Abraham Teniers combined the genres of singerie and guardroom scene in the composition Singerie in a Guardroom now in the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium.[10]
Singeries
Abraham Teniers contributed to the spread of the genre of the 'monkey scene', also called 'singerie' (a word, which in French means a 'comical grimace, behaviour or trick').[11] Comical scenes with monkeys appearing in human attire and a human environment are a pictorial genre that was initiated in Flemish painting in the 16th century and was subsequently further developed in the 17th century. The Flemish engraver Pieter van der Borcht introduced the singerie as an independent theme around 1575 in a series of prints, which are strongly embedded in the artistic tradition of Pieter Bruegel the Elder. These prints were widely disseminated and the theme was then picked up by other Flemish artists in particular by those in Antwerp such as Frans Francken the Younger, Jan Brueghel the Elder and the Younger, Sebastiaen Vrancx and Jan van Kessel the Elder.
David Teniers the Younger became the principal practitioner of the genre and developed it further with his younger brother Abraham. The two brothers were able to cater to the prevailing taste in the art market and were thus instrumental in spreading the genre outside Flanders. Later in the 17th century artists like Nicolaes van Verendael, principally known as a painter of flower still lifes started to paint ‘monkey scenes’ as well.[12]
Engravings
Abraham Teniers was a skilled engraver and is known for his engravings made principally after works of his brother David. An example is the engraving by Abraham of the Village Fair after a design by David.[13]
Publishing
Abraham Teniers was further active as a publisher. He was responsible for the publication of the Theatrum Pictorium ('Theatre of Paintings'), the project initiated by his brother David to make a set of engravings of the entire art collection of Archduke Leopold Wilhelm. As David was the director of this art collection he had conceived this plan but ultimately only a series of 246 plates was produced by several engravers (243 of these represented about half of the Italian paintings then owned by the Archduke). Abraham Teniers published the first edition in 1658 as loose leaves and unnumbered.[14] He also published ethchings made by various engravers after the work of his brother David.[15]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Abraham Teniers at the Netherlands Institute for Art History (Dutch)
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 John (Maria Huibert) Vermoelen, Notes historiques sur David Teniers et sa famille, J.-B. Dumoulin, Paris, 1870, p. 12 (French)
- ↑ Hans Vlieghe. "Teniers." Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press. Web. 5 January 2015
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 Biography of Abraham Teniers at the Museo del Prado site (Spanish)
- ↑ J. B. Van Der Staelen Peeters, Geschiedenis der Antwerpsche rederykkamers. 1: Geschiedenis der violieren, 1834, p. 81 (Dutch)
- ↑ The RKD rejects the attribution of one of the Guard Room Scenes to Abraham Teniers and attributes it to manner of/after David Teniers (II) (Dutch)
- ↑ Review of Jochai Rosen, Soldiers at Leisure, The Guardroom Scene in Dutch Genre Painting of the Golden Age at historians of Netherlandish art
- ↑ Gillis II van Tilborgh Guardroom scene at Jean Moust
- ↑ Abraham Teniers, Un cuerpo de guardia at the Museo del Prado site (Spanish)
- ↑ Abraham Teniers, Singerie in een wachtpost at the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium (Dutch)
- ↑ 'Singerie' in Larousse online (French)
- ↑ Bert Schepers, Monkey Madness in Seventeenth-Century Antwerp, in: The Rubenianum Quarterly, 2012 2, p. 5
- ↑ Village Fair at the Rijksmuseum (Dutch)
- ↑ Theatrum Pictorium at the British Museum
- ↑ Abraham Teniers at the British Museum
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