Isaac van Swanenburg

Isaac van Swanenburg

Self-portrait 1568
Born Isaac Claesz
1537
Leiden
Died 1624 (aged 8687)
Leiden
Nationality Netherlands
Known for Painting, Stained glass, Politics
Movement Renaissance

Isaak Nicolai or Isaac Claesz van Swanenburg (1537 1624 in Leiden) was a Dutch Renaissance painter and glazier active in Leiden and Gouda. He was a city council member from 1576 and became mayor of Leiden five times.

Biography

According to Houbraken, Swanenburg was a very good painter, whose paintings hung in various council buildings of Leiden. Houbraken was surprised that Swanenburg was never mentioned in Karel van Mander's Schilder-boeck.[1] Houbraken was however mistaken, because Swanenburg is mentioned as one of more than 20 disciples of Frans Floris in Van Mander's long list of pupils.[2] According to the Netherlands Institute for Art History, Swanenburg was in Antwerp studying with Floris for 6–8 years in his youth, and settled in Leiden after his training in 1565. He briefly fled to Hamburg for a year during the Siege of Leiden, but had returned by 1574.[3] He kept a large and respected workshop in Leiden, for oil- and glass painting.[1] His pupils were Jan van Goyen, Coenraet van Schilperoort, Otto van Veen, and his three sons.[3] He was buried in the Pieterskerk, Leiden.

Paintings

Detail of Glass 25, William of Orange freeing townspeople from Spanish tyranny after the siege of Leiden
Spinning wool, a larger-than-life painting of the wool trade in Leiden with a view of two small workers' homes, 1595, by Isaac van Swanenburg

Swanenburg created the cartoons for the stained glass windows no. 25 and 26 from Leiden to the Janskerk in Gouda. The reference in Van Mander is to Isaack Claessen Cloeck, which is revealing considering that the registers of Gouda show Swanenburg was paid a third of the sum that went to the Leiden glasspainter Cornelis Cornelisz Clock.[4] This Clock was a probable relative.

Legacy

Swanenburg's paintings of various notable burgers of Leiden have survived, as well as a series of monumental historical allegories on the wool trade, an important source of income for the city during his time as councilman.

Swanenburg's oldest son, Jacob Isaacsz Swanenburg, became a painter and a master of the young Rembrandt. Claes Isaacsz Swanenburg also became a painter and lived and worked in the Hague, where his art was appreciated. The youngest son, Willem Isaacsz Swanenburg, became an engraver.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 (Dutch) Isaak Nicolai biography in De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen (1718) by Arnold Houbraken, courtesy of the Digital library for Dutch literature
  2. (Dutch) Isaack Claessen Cloeck, in Frans Floris biography in Karel van Mander's Schilderboeck, 1604, courtesy of the Digital library for Dutch literature
  3. 1 2 76187 artist record for Swanenburg in the Netherlands Institute for Art History (RKD)
  4. Zsuzsanna van Ruyven-Zeman, Xander van Eck and Henny van Dolder-de Wit, Het geheim van Gouda: de cartons van de Goudse glazen, Zutphen (Walburg Pers) 2002.
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