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Garden Vase with Marine Creatures, Allegory of the Navy?
anonymous, c. 1800
- Artwork typesculpture
- Object numberBK-NM-8921
- Dimensionsheight 93 cm x diameter 73 cm x diameter 59 cm (base) x weight 424 kg (total)
- Physical characteristicsmarble
Identification
Title(s)
Garden Vase with Marine Creatures, Allegory of the Navy?
Object type
Object number
BK-NM-8921
Part of catalogue
Creation
Creation
sculptor: anonymous, Northern Netherlands
Dating
c. 1800
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Material and technique
Physical description
marble
Dimensions
height 93 cm x diameter 73 cm x diameter 59 cm (base) x weight 424 kg (total)
Acquisition and rights
Copyright
Provenance
…; ? Huis ten Bosch Palace, The Hague;{G.C.W. Bohnensieg, ‘Het Rijks Magazijn van Geneesmiddelen te Amsterdam’, _Eigen Haard_ (1891), pp. 53-56, esp. p. 54. According to this publication the vases were transferred from Huis ten Bosch to the ’s Rijksmagazijn van Geneesmiddelen during the French Period (1795-1813).} from ’s Rijksmagazijn van Geneesmiddelen (National Repository of Medicine), 8 Lange Voorhout, The Hague,{Note RMA.} transferred by the Ministerie van Oorlog (Department of War), to the museum, with BK-NM-8922, 1889
Documentation
Persistent URL
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anonymous
Garden Vase with Marine Creatures (Allegory of the Navy?)
Northern Netherlands, c. 1800
Technical notes
Sculpted. The pedestal is loose.
Condition
The lid is missing.
Provenance
…; ? Huis ten Bosch Palace, The Hague;1G.C.W. Bohnensieg, ‘Het Rijks Magazijn van Geneesmiddelen te Amsterdam’, Eigen Haard (1891), pp. 53-56, esp. p. 54. According to this publication the vases were transferred from Huis ten Bosch to the ’s Rijksmagazijn van Geneesmiddelen during the French Period (1795-1813). from ’s Rijksmagazijn van Geneesmiddelen (National Repository of Medicine), 8 Lange Voorhout, The Hague,2Note RMA. transferred by the Ministerie van Oorlog (Department of War), to the museum, with BK-NM-8922, 1889
Object number: BK-NM-8921
Entry
These classicist garden vases were transferred from the former National Repository of Medicine at 8 Lange Voorhout, The Hague (since 1867 in use by the Court of Audit) to the Rijksmuseum in 1889.3For the different occupants and uses of the building at 8 Lange Voorhout, see Th. Wijsenbeek-Olthuis (ed.), Het Lange Voorhout: Monumenten, Mensen en Macht, Zwolle 1998, pp. 257-59. The objects are said to have originated from the gardens of Huis ten Bosch, the stadholder’s palace in The Hague, ‘which served as a hospital at that time’.4G.C.W. Bohnensieg, ‘Het Rijks Magazijn van Geneesmiddelen te Amsterdam’, Eigen Haard (1891), pp. 53-56, esp. 54. According to the same source, in the French Period they were transferred to the National Repository of Medicine at Lange Voorhout, to serve as mortars in which to grind medicinal powders for the army. In view of their mediocre artistic quality, the vases are unlikely to have ever been owned by the stadholder. Having said that, the suggested military provenance is supported by the iconography of the reliefs, which could well be interpreted as references to what, at that time, were the main services of the armed forces. The body of the present vase contains a relief with mythological sea creatures which can be interpreted as symbolizing the navy, while the other depicts a cavalcade of warriors on horseback (BK-NM-8922), referring to the army. We can assume that these garden vases were ordered by the Department of War, housed at 7 Lange Voorhout. Perhaps, from the start, they were intended to decorate the grounds of the National Repository across the street at 8 Lange Voorhout, which was then home to the Military Medical Corps. It is quite possible that at a later stage the garden vases were used at the Medical Laboratory (on the same premises) as receptacles in which to grind medication, and this would also be a logical explanation for the absence of lids which characterize garden vases of this type.
Bieke van der Mark, 2025
Literature
G.C.W. Bohnensieg, ‘Het Rijks Magazijn van Geneesmiddelen te Amsterdam’, Eigen Haard (1891), pp. 53-56, esp. p. 54; J. Leeuwenberg with the assistance of W. Halsema-Kubes, Beeldhouwkunst in het Rijksmuseum, coll. cat. Amsterdam 1973, no. 398
Citation
B. van der Mark, 2025, 'anonymous, Garden Vase with Marine Creatures (Allegory of the Navy?), Northern Netherlands, c. 1800', in F. Scholten and B. van der Mark (eds.), European Sculpture in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: https://data.rijksmuseum.nl/20035835
(accessed 11 December 2025 17:12:22).Footnotes
- 1G.C.W. Bohnensieg, ‘Het Rijks Magazijn van Geneesmiddelen te Amsterdam’, Eigen Haard (1891), pp. 53-56, esp. p. 54. According to this publication the vases were transferred from Huis ten Bosch to the ’s Rijksmagazijn van Geneesmiddelen during the French Period (1795-1813).
- 2Note RMA.
- 3For the different occupants and uses of the building at 8 Lange Voorhout, see Th. Wijsenbeek-Olthuis (ed.), Het Lange Voorhout: Monumenten, Mensen en Macht, Zwolle 1998, pp. 257-59.
- 4G.C.W. Bohnensieg, ‘Het Rijks Magazijn van Geneesmiddelen te Amsterdam’, Eigen Haard (1891), pp. 53-56, esp. 54.