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The Forum of Nerva in Rome, Seen from the Temple of Minerva
Pieter Lastman, 1606
Between c. 1603 and 1607 Lastman resided in Rome, where he drew this refined view of the overgrown remains of the Forum of Nerva. Lastman frequently included such ruins in the background of his history scenes. This work surfaced only in 2012 and is one of the few extant drawings from Lastman’s Italian period.
- Artwork typedrawing
- Object numberRP-T-2012-22
- Dimensionsheight 183 mm x width 231 mm
- Physical characteristicspen and brown ink, with brown wash
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Identification
Title(s)
- The Forum of Nerva in Rome, Seen from the Temple of Minerva
- View of the Forum of Nerva from the Temple of Minerva, Rome
Object type
Object number
RP-T-2012-22
Inscriptions / marks
date and inscription: ‘Roma 1606’
Part of catalogue
Creation
Creation
draughtsman: Pieter Lastman, Rome
Dating
1606
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Material and technique
Physical description
pen and brown ink, with brown wash
Dimensions
height 183 mm x width 231 mm
This work is about
Subject
Place
Acquisition and rights
Credit line
Purchased with the support of the BankGiro Lottery
Acquisition
purchase 2012-07-03
Copyright
Provenance
…; sale, London (Christie’s), 3 July 2012, no. 49; to the museum
Remarks
Please note that this provenance was formulated with a special focus on provenance research for the years 1933-45 and could therefore be incomplete. There may be more (mostly earlier) provenance information known in the museum. In case this item has an uncertain or incomplete provenance for the years 1933-45, the Rijksmuseum welcomes information and assistance in the investigation and clarification of the provenance of all works during that era.
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Pieter Lastman
View of the Forum of Nerva from the Temple of Minerva, Rome
Rome, 1606
Inscriptions
inscribed and dated by the artist: lower right, in brown ink, Roma 1606
Provenance
…; sale, London (Christie’s), 3 July 2012, no. 49; to the museum
Object number: RP-T-2012-22
Credit line: Purchased with the support of the BankGiro Lottery
The artist
Biography
Pieter Lastman (Amsterdam c. 1583 - Amsterdam 1633)
He was born in Amsterdam around 1583 into a well-to-do Catholic family. His father, Pieter Segersz (1548-1602?), worked as a messenger for the city of Amsterdam and the orphans’ court until he was removed from office after the Alteration of 26 May 1578 because of his religious beliefs. Lastman’s mother, Barbara Jacobsdr (1549-1624), was an official appraiser and second-hand dealer, undoubtedly of art works among other items. Her career and that of one of Lastman’s uncles, who was a goldsmith, probably influenced Lastman’s own choice of career.
According to Van Mander, he was apprenticed as a youth to Gerrit Pietersz (1566-afer 1612), a pupil of Cornelis Cornelisz van Haarlem (1562-1638). Lastman’s three earliest dated works, all drawings – Hagar and Ishmael in the Wilderness of 1601 in the Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven (inv. no. (1961.64.6), 1C.T. Seifert, Pieter Lastman: Studien zu Leben und Werk mit einem kritischen Verzeichnis der Werke mit Themen aus der antiken Mythologie und Historie, Petersberg 2011, fig 2. and two in the Rijksmuseum (inv. nos. RP-T-1887-A-1165 and RP-T-1887-A-1166)2Ibid., nos. 24-25. – are clearly indebted to Pietersz’s Mannerist style.
Van Mander also informs us that Lastman was in Italy at the time he was writing his Schilder-boeck, that is around 1600-03. Financially freed by an inheritance from his father, who had his last will drawn up in June 1602, Lastman probably left for Italy not long thereafter. According to Houbraken, in 1605 he was in Italy, where he would have been influenced by the brightly coloured, small-sized cabinet pictures of Adam Elsheimer (1578-1610), the naturalistic rendering of figures and compositions of Caravaggio (1571-1610) and the monumental frescoes of Raphael (1483-1520) and his school. Lastman’s sojourn in Italy is documented by three drawings. Two are topographical views in Rome, both inscribed and dated 1606: a View of the Palatine,), which in 2001 was in a private collection, Cologne;3A. Tümpel and P. Schatborn et al., Pieter Lastman. Leermeester van Rembrandt/Pieter Lastman: The Man Who Taught Rembrandt, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Museum Het Rembrandthuis) 1991-92, no. 26. and the Rijksmuseum’s View of the Forum of Nerva from the Temple of Minera (inv. no. RP-T-2012-22).4P. Schatborn, ‘Een tekening van Pieter Lastman uit Italië’, Kroniek van het Rembrandthuis, 2012, pp. 36-41. The third Italian-period drawing by Lastman is a copy, now in the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge (inv. no. PD. 445-1963),5A. Tümpel and P. Schatborn et al., Pieter Lastman. Leermeester van Rembrandt/Pieter Lastman: The Man Who Taught Rembrandt, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Museum Het Rembrandthuis) 1991-92, no. 27. of the Adoration of the Shepherds by Veronese (1528-1588) now in SS. Giovanni e Paolo, Venice (but then in the city’s Crociferi). Lastman probably executed his copy on his journey back to Amsterdam in late 1606 or early 1607.
By 1 March 1607 he had returned to Amsterdam, where he is recorded as one of the buyers at the sale of Gillis van Coninxloo II (1544-1606). His first dated painting, an Adoration of the Magi, in the National Gallery, Prague (inv. no. DO 4563),6C.T. Seifert, Pieter Lastman: Studien zu Leben und Werk mit einem kritischen Verzeichnis der Werke mit Themen aus der antiken Mythologie und Historie, Petersberg 2011, fig. 15. is from the following year, 1608. From that year onwards he lived at Amsterdam’s Sint Anthonisbreestraat 59. Lastman was the foremost artist of the group of painters who have come to be known as the Pre-Rembrandtists. His history paintings, featuring subjects taken from the Bible, secular history and mythology, a great number of which had never previously been depicted – or if so only in the graphic arts – often formed the starting point for the artists in his immediate circle. His most well-known pupils were Jan Lievens (1607-1674) and Rembrandt (1606-1669), who trained with him in 1619 and 1624 respectively. Only two commissions of works from Lastman are known: the design, preserved in the Kupferstichkabinett, Berlin (KdZ 3793),7Ibid., fig. 26. for a window in the Zuiderkerk in Amsterdam from the goldsmiths’ guild, executed in 1611, and three paintings (destr.) executed in 1619 for the private chapel of Christian IV of Denmark (1577-1648) in Frederiksborg Castle. Lastman was buried a bachelor in the Oude Kerk in Amsterdam on 8 April 1633.
Jonathan Bikker, 2007/Jane Shoaf Turner, 2025
References
K. van Mander, Het schilder-boeck waer in voor eerst de leerlustighe iueght den grondt der edel vry schilderconst in verscheyden deelen wort voorghedraghen, Haarlem 1604, fol. 207v; A. Houbraken, De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen, 3 vols., Amsterdam 1718-21, I (1718), pp. 11, 97-102, 132, 214, 254. 296; A. Welcker, 'Pieter Lastman als teekenaar van landschap en figuur', Oud-Holland 62 (1947), pp. 165-76; K. Bauch, 'Entwurf und Komposition bei Pieter Lastman', Münchner Jahrbuch der bildenden Kunst 6 (1955), pp. 213-21; K. Bauch, 'Handzeichnungen Pieter Lastmans', Münchner Jahrbuch der bildenden Kunst 3-4 (1952-53), pp. 220-32; S.A.C. Dudok van Heel, 'Waar woonde en werkte Pieter Lastman (1583-1633)?', Maandblad Amstelodamum 62 (1975), pp. 31-36; W. Sumowski, 'Beiträge zur Kenntnis der Lastman-Zeichnungen', Pantheon 38 (1980), pp. 58-64; S.A.C. Dudok van Heel, 'De familie van de schilder Pieter Lastman (1583-1633)', Jaarboek Centraal Bureau voor Genealogie 45 (1991), pp. 110-32; S.A.C. Dudok van Heel, 'Pieter Lastman (1583-1633). Een schilder in de Sint Anthonisbreestraat', De Kroniek van het Rembrandthuis 2 (1991), pp. 2-15; A. Tümpel and P. Schatborn et al., Pieter Lastman. Leermeester van Rembrandt/Pieter Lastman: The Man Who Taught Rembrandt, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Museum Het Rembrandthuis) 1991-92; J. Turner (ed.), The Dictionary of Art, 34 vols., London/New York 1996, XVIII, pp. 817-20 (text by B. Broos); S.A.C. Dudok van Heel, 'Pieter Lastman (1583-1633). Een katholiek schilder in de Sint Anthonisbreestraat', in idem, De jonge Rembrandt onder tijdgenoten. Godsdienst en schilderkunst in Leiden en Amsterdam Nijmegen 2006 (PhD diss., University of Nijmegen), pp. 53-123; M. Sitt (ed.), Pieter Lastman: In Rembrandts Schatten?, exh. cat. Hamburg (Hamburger Kunsthalle) 2006; C.T. Seifert, Pieter Lastman: Studien zu Leben und Werk mit einem kritischen Verzeichnis der Werke mit Themen aus der antiken Mythologie und Historie, Petersberg 2011; A. Golahny, 'Pieter Lastman: Moments of Recognition', Netherlands Yearbook for History of Art 60 (2010), pp. 179-201; RKD artists https://rkd.nl/artists/48209
Entry
Between circa 1603 and 1607 Lastman lived in Rome, where he recorded this view of the overgrown remains of the ancient Forum of Nerva. In his later career back in the Netherlands, the artist regularly incorporated views of ruins in the backgrounds of his history paintings. This drawing – which emerged only in 2012, when the attribution was confirmed by Schatborn – is one of the few extant drawings from Lastman’s Italian sojourn.8The drawing had initially been presented to the auction house as by Paul Bril (c. 1553-1626). Until then, only one other view of Rome was known from his journey: the View of the Palatine, Rome, which in 2001 was in a private collection, Cologne.9P. Schatborn, with J. Verberne, Drawn to Warmth: 17th-century Dutch Artists in Italy, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Rijksmuseum) 2001, p. 45, fig. B). It is likewise inscribed and dated, ‘Roma 1606’ and also features a similar pair of figures in the middle ground, rendered in an abstract manner like to oblong shapes. Unusually for an early Dutch Italianate artist, Lastman made the present drawing from the Temple of Minerva, looking out towards the open space in front of the temple. Most artists recorded the site from the place where the men and donkeys appear on the right of Lastman's view. Examples of this more common viewpoint by other artists in the Rijksmuseum’s collection include a sheet by Cornelis Cort (1533-1578), which is inscribed, ‘Dit staat binnen Romen beneden Kampidoli ad foro Nerviano anno 1566 XI dach van November’ (inv. no. [RP-T-1922-7(https://id.rijksmuseum.nl/200118486){target="_blank"}.10Ibid., p. 12, fig. 4. Lastman looked through the columns at the side of the temple to a building with a sloping roof, which encompasses part of the forum wall and a fragment of a frieze. The latter motif appears on the right of a drawing by Matthijs Bril (1550-1583) in the Louvre, Paris (inv. no. 20958,11P. Schatborn, with J. Verberne, Drawn to Warmth: 17th-century Dutch Artists in Italy, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Rijksmuseum) 2001, p. 12, fig. B. which otherwise corresponds closely to the view represented in the Rijksmuseum’s sheet by Cort.
Jane Shoaf Turner, 2025
Literature
P. Schatborn, ‘Een tekening van Pieter Lastman uit Italië’, Kroniek van het Rembrandthuis, 2012, pp. 36-41; P. Schatborn and L. van Sloten, Old Drawings, New Names: Rembrandt and his Contemporaries, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Museum Het Rembrandthuis) 2014, no. 53 (text by L. van Sloten); https://rkd.nl/images/292693
Citation
J. Shoaf Turner, 2025, 'Pieter Lastman, _, Rome, 1606', in J. Turner (ed.), _(under construction) Drawings 2, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: https://data.rijksmuseum.nl/200547196
(accessed 1 December 2025 00:26:24).Footnotes
- 1C.T. Seifert, Pieter Lastman: Studien zu Leben und Werk mit einem kritischen Verzeichnis der Werke mit Themen aus der antiken Mythologie und Historie, Petersberg 2011, fig 2.
- 2Ibid., nos. 24-25.
- 3A. Tümpel and P. Schatborn et al., Pieter Lastman. Leermeester van Rembrandt/Pieter Lastman: The Man Who Taught Rembrandt, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Museum Het Rembrandthuis) 1991-92, no. 26.
- 4P. Schatborn, ‘Een tekening van Pieter Lastman uit Italië’, Kroniek van het Rembrandthuis, 2012, pp. 36-41.
- 5A. Tümpel and P. Schatborn et al., Pieter Lastman. Leermeester van Rembrandt/Pieter Lastman: The Man Who Taught Rembrandt, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Museum Het Rembrandthuis) 1991-92, no. 27.
- 6C.T. Seifert, Pieter Lastman: Studien zu Leben und Werk mit einem kritischen Verzeichnis der Werke mit Themen aus der antiken Mythologie und Historie, Petersberg 2011, fig. 15.
- 7Ibid., fig. 26.
- 8The drawing had initially been presented to the auction house as by Paul Bril (c. 1553-1626).
- 9P. Schatborn, with J. Verberne, Drawn to Warmth: 17th-century Dutch Artists in Italy, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Rijksmuseum) 2001, p. 45, fig. B). It is likewise inscribed and dated, ‘Roma 1606’ and also features a similar pair of figures in the middle ground, rendered in an abstract manner like to oblong shapes. Unusually for an early Dutch Italianate artist, Lastman made the present drawing from the Temple of Minerva, looking out towards the open space in front of the temple. Most artists recorded the site from the place where the men and donkeys appear on the right of Lastman's view. Examples of this more common viewpoint by other artists in the Rijksmuseum’s collection include a sheet by Cornelis Cort (1533-1578), which is inscribed, ‘Dit staat binnen Romen beneden Kampidoli ad foro Nerviano anno 1566 XI dach van November’ (inv. no. [RP-T-1922-7
- 10Ibid., p. 12, fig. 4.
- 11P. Schatborn, with J. Verberne, Drawn to Warmth: 17th-century Dutch Artists in Italy, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Rijksmuseum) 2001, p. 12, fig. B.











