Hendrick de Keyser (I)

William of Orange (1533-1584) on his Deathbed, Model for his Tomb Monument

Amsterdam, 1613 - 1614

Technical notes

Modelled and fired.


Scientific examination and reports

  • conservation report: B. Lamain, RMA, 2012

Condition

The tassels of the top cushion and sections of the foot end of the bed are missing. The prince’s nose and right foot, the tassels of the bottom cushion and some sections of the dog have been restored. The sculpture rests on a 19th-century oak socle in imitation of the actual tomb in Delft.


Conservation

  • Bodill Lamain, 2007: several cracks stabilized.
  • Bodill Lamain, 2013: cleaned; several retouches and excess plaster additions removed; several additions to the bottom plate improved; several cracks consolidated.
  • I. Breebaart, 2013: socle restored/re-glued.

Provenance

? from the artist, bequeathed to his widow, Barbara (‘Beyken’) van Wildere, Amsterdam, 1621;1Possibly ’t model van de begraeffenis van de voorsz. zijn Excie van Oraignen mentioned in her testament of 15 November 1621, see A.D. de Vries, ‘Biografische aantekeningen betreffende voornamelijk Amsterdamsche schilders, plaatsnijders, enz. en hunne verwanten’, Oud Holland 3 (1885), pp. 55-80, esp. p. 76. …; collection of the City of Amsterdam, first recorded in 1877;2Catalogus van het Amsterdamsch Museum van het Koninklijk Oudheidkundig Genootschap in de zalen van het Oude-Mannenhuis, exh. cat. Amsterdam 1877, no. 607. on loan to the museum, since 1887

ObjectNumber: BK-AM-37

Credit line: On loan from the City of Amsterdam


Entry

When Prince Willem van Orange died on 10 July 1584 at the Prinsenhof in Delft after a cowardly assault on his life carried out by Balthasar Gerardts, the States of Holland determined in consultation with the other provinces that the prince would be buried at the expense of the state with the honour befitting a man of his stature. On 3 August 1584, the prince was ceremoniously laid to rest in the Nieuwe Kerk in Delft. As a consequence of the war with Spain, however, there was neither the funds nor the opportunity to build a tomb monument at this time. Instead, a simple gravestone sufficed, much to the astonishment of an English visitor to the church in the year 1592, who described the scene as such: ‘the poorest that I ever saw for such a person, being only of rough stones and morter with postes of wood, coloured over with black, and very little erected from the ground’. No earlier than 1613, during the Twelve Years’ Truce with Spain, were steps first taken to rectify this deplorable situation. On 14 November of that year, the members of the States General came together to decide on the erection of a monumental tomb for William of Orange, almost thirty years after his death. This resulted in a succinctly worded decree, recorded in the States’ resolutions as follows: ‘Having seen several models, from which one could make the monument, tomb or grave in the highly esteemed memory of His Excellency in the name of the Republic of these United Netherlands [...]’.3Syn gesien eenige modellen, daer nae dat men soude moghen maecken het monument, Tombe ofte begraeffenisplaetse van Syn Excellentie Hoochloffelycker Memorien op ten naam van de Republycqe van dese Vereenigde Nederlanden...’ R.F.P. de Beaufort, Het mausoleum der Oranjes te Delft, Utrecht 1931, pp. 13-17. Commissioned to take on this highly esteemed project was the Amsterdam city sculptor Hendrick de Keyser (1565-1621), whose design for the grand princely tomb monument also included a baldachin made of multi-coloured marble. Below it lay two depictions of the prince: the first in marble, with an effigy of the prince lying in state; the second in bronze, portraying the prince as a military commander, sitting in a chair. For the first sculpture, De Keyser produced the present scale-model in terracotta, undoubtedly to be presented as a vidimus to those in charge of the project. The oak socle on which this terracotta rests, which mimics the form of the tomb in Delft, is a nineteenth-century addition.

The prince is depicted in a fairly unusual, realistic form, as if to suggest his appearance shortly after his death. This likely recalls the manner in which William of Orange lay in state from the day of his assassination up until his burial ceremony. He wears the tabard in which he was murdered, with his doublet half-unbuttoned and his arms positioned alongside the body. A sleeping dog lies at his feet – a traditional motif conveying loyalty and faithfulness. This unembellished portrayal of the dead body marked the introduction of a new iconography in Dutch tomb sculpture, culminating in a number of burial effigies produced shortly after the middle of the seventeenth century which show the deceased figure in his sleep. De Keyser chose to show the deceased prince lying on his deathbed, as if peacefully awaiting his eventual resurrection, without resorting to standard early-baroque stylistic elements that were part and parcel for Roman Catholic burial sculpture at this time.4F. Scholten, Sumptuous Memories: Studies in Seventeenth-Century Dutch Tomb Sculpture, 2003 (diss., University of Amsterdam), pp. 73-88.

De Keyser’s work on the tomb monument in Delft brought him great posthumous esteem. His contemporaries voiced utmost praise for the sculptor. Explicitly honouring the sculptor as the maker of the princely tomb monument, the poet Jan Vos penned a brief tribute with the verse: Door ‘t Prinsegraf te Delft zal Kaizer endloos leven. During the last ten years of his life, De Keyser’s fame took on truly formidable proportions. In 1614, De Keyser not only received the commission for the prestigious tomb in Delft, but he was also approached by the city of Rotterdam to work on a highly exceptional project involving a monumental statue of Erasmus, to be executed in bronze. In 1619, he was engaged by the Danish king Christian IV, resulting in the making of nineteen sculptures for Frederiksborg Castle outside Copenhagen.5F. Scholten, ‘Hendrick de Keyser, Gerrit Lambertsen van Cuilenborch and the Sculptures of the Marble Gallery of Frederiksborg Castle’, Architectura 47 (2025) [forthcoming.] Despite encountering problems with the (Protestant) Amsterdam church council stemming from his work on behalf of the (Roman Catholic) Sint Janskathedraal in Den Bosch, De Keyser still managed to complete and deliver an alabaster statue of St John the Evangelist. This sculptural work formed the focal point of the church’s choir screen, today preserved in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.6London, Victoria and Albert Museum in London, inv. no. 1046:1-1871, see G. Luijten et al., Dawn of the Golden Age: Northern Netherlandish Art 1580-1620, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Rijksmuseum) 1993-94, no. 60. Following the sculptor’s death in 1621, De Keyser’s workshop was taken over by his son, Pieter, who was ultimately responsible for the completion of the tomb monument in Delft. Among the various items cited in the testament – dated 15 November 1621 – of De Keyser’s widow, Barbara van Wildere, one entry may possibly refer to the present terracotta model: ‘the model of the tomb of the aforementioned His Excellency of Orange’.7’t model van de begraeffenis van de voorsz. zijn Excie van Oraignen; E. Neurdenburg, Hendrick de Keyser: Beeldhouwer en bouwmeester van Amsterdam, Amsterdam 1930, pp. 95-96. While excluded in explicit terms from ‘all models, cartoons, sketches on paper, drawings and the sculpted models […] bequeathed by the deceased Hendrick de Keyser, his father’ to Pieter during his mother’s lifetime, the present terracotta nevertheless likely entered his possession following her death.8alle de modellen, patroonen, papieren, teyckeningen ende bootseersels (...) bij Sal: Hendrick de Keyser, sijn vader nagelaten; E. Neurdenburg, Hendrick de Keyser: Beeldhouwer en bouwmeester van Amsterdam, Amsterdam 1930, pp. 95-96.

At least three bronze miniature busts were cast after the prince’s face on the terracotta model.9F. Scholten, ‘Hele en halve hoofden, kanttekeningen bij terracotta portretten van Hendrick de Keyser’, in P. van den Brink and L.M. Helmus (ed.), Album discipulorum J.R.J. van Asperen de Boer, Zwolle 1997, pp. 185-95, esp. p. 195, note 20. One bronze version, on an 18th-century base, is in the Rijksmuseum (BK-2018-129). A gilt-bronze piece from the former Cyril Humphris Collection (his sale, New York (Sotheby’s), 10 January 1995, no. 77) is now in Apeldoorn, Paleis Het Loo, inv. no. RL9457. A third bust, also of gilt-bronze, is preserved in Paris, Fondation Custodia. While all depict William of Orange with his eyes opened, the matching dimensions and the manner in which the head presses into the collar are characteristics confirm that these works are direct casts taken from the terracotta model of the deceased prince lying in state. Accordingly, one must conclude the closed eyes were modified prior to the casting of the wax model. These three bronze portraits were likely made in the De Keyser workshop, either during or shortly after the monument’s completion.

Frits Scholten, 2024


Literature

J. Leeuwenberg with the assistance of W. Halsema-Kubes, Beeldhouwkunst in het Rijksmuseum, coll. cat. Amsterdam 1973, no. 226, with earlier literature; T.G. Kootte and R.E.O. Ekkart, Prins Willem van Oranje 1533-1584, exh. cat. Delft (Het Prinsenhof) 1984, no. 13.3; G. Luijten et al., Dawn of the Golden Age: Northern Netherlandish Art 1580-1620, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Rijksmuseum) 1993-94, no. 61; M. Jonker et al., In beeld gebracht: Beeldhouwkunst uit de collectie van het Amsterdams Historisch Museum, coll. cat. Amsterdam 1995, no. 60; F. Scholten, Gebeeldhouwde portretten/Portrait Sculptures, coll. cat. Amsterdam (Rijksmuseum) 1995, no. 10; N. Ex and F. Scholten, De prins en De Keyser: Restauratie en geschiedenis van het grafmonument voor Willem van Oranje, Bussum 2001, pp. 113, 163; F. Scholten, Sumptuous Memories: Studies in Seventeenth-Century Dutch Tomb Sculpture, Zwolle 2003, p. 55; J. Kiers et al., The Glory of the Golden Age: Dutch Art of the 17th Century: Painting, Sculpture and Decorative Art, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Rijksmuseum) 2000, p. 24; G. van der Ham, De geschiedenis van Nederland in 100 voorwerpen, Amsterdam 2013, no. 17; D.R. Horst, Willem van Oranje, Amsterdam 2013, pp. 44-49; F. Scholten, ‘Hendrick de Keyser, Gerrit Lambertsen van Cuilenborch and the sculptures of the Marble Gallery of Frederiksborg Castle’, Architectura 47 (2025) [forthcoming]


Citation

F. Scholten, 2024, 'Hendrick de (I) Keyser, William of Orange (1533-1584) on his Deathbed, Model for his Tomb Monument, Amsterdam, 1613 - 1614', in F. Scholten and B. van der Mark (eds.), European Sculpture in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.24516

(accessed 10 May 2025 20:12:31).

Footnotes

  • 1Possibly ’t model van de begraeffenis van de voorsz. zijn Excie van Oraignen mentioned in her testament of 15 November 1621, see A.D. de Vries, ‘Biografische aantekeningen betreffende voornamelijk Amsterdamsche schilders, plaatsnijders, enz. en hunne verwanten’, Oud Holland 3 (1885), pp. 55-80, esp. p. 76.
  • 2Catalogus van het Amsterdamsch Museum van het Koninklijk Oudheidkundig Genootschap in de zalen van het Oude-Mannenhuis, exh. cat. Amsterdam 1877, no. 607.
  • 3Syn gesien eenige modellen, daer nae dat men soude moghen maecken het monument, Tombe ofte begraeffenisplaetse van Syn Excellentie Hoochloffelycker Memorien op ten naam van de Republycqe van dese Vereenigde Nederlanden...’ R.F.P. de Beaufort, Het mausoleum der Oranjes te Delft, Utrecht 1931, pp. 13-17.
  • 4F. Scholten, Sumptuous Memories: Studies in Seventeenth-Century Dutch Tomb Sculpture, 2003 (diss., University of Amsterdam), pp. 73-88.
  • 5F. Scholten, ‘Hendrick de Keyser, Gerrit Lambertsen van Cuilenborch and the Sculptures of the Marble Gallery of Frederiksborg Castle’, Architectura 47 (2025) [forthcoming
  • 6London, Victoria and Albert Museum in London, inv. no. 1046:1-1871, see G. Luijten et al., Dawn of the Golden Age: Northern Netherlandish Art 1580-1620, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Rijksmuseum) 1993-94, no. 60.
  • 7’t model van de begraeffenis van de voorsz. zijn Excie van Oraignen; E. Neurdenburg, Hendrick de Keyser: Beeldhouwer en bouwmeester van Amsterdam, Amsterdam 1930, pp. 95-96.
  • 8alle de modellen, patroonen, papieren, teyckeningen ende bootseersels (...) bij Sal: Hendrick de Keyser, sijn vader nagelaten; E. Neurdenburg, Hendrick de Keyser: Beeldhouwer en bouwmeester van Amsterdam, Amsterdam 1930, pp. 95-96.
  • 9F. Scholten, ‘Hele en halve hoofden, kanttekeningen bij terracotta portretten van Hendrick de Keyser’, in P. van den Brink and L.M. Helmus (ed.), Album discipulorum J.R.J. van Asperen de Boer, Zwolle 1997, pp. 185-95, esp. p. 195, note 20. One bronze version, on an 18th-century base, is in the Rijksmuseum (BK-2018-129). A gilt-bronze piece from the former Cyril Humphris Collection (his sale, New York (Sotheby’s), 10 January 1995, no. 77) is now in Apeldoorn, Paleis Het Loo, inv. no. RL9457. A third bust, also of gilt-bronze, is preserved in Paris, Fondation Custodia.