Portrait of Swaddled Twins: The Early-Deceased Children of Jacob de Graeff and Aeltge Boelens

anonymous, c. 1617

Portret van een ingebakerde tweeling: de vroeg gestorven kinderen van Jacob de Graeff en Aeltge Boelens. Links- en rechtsboven het familiewapen.

  • Artwork typepainting
  • Object numberSK-A-981
  • Dimensionsframe: height 90 cm x width 70.1 cm (support incl. frame), sight size: height 71 cm x width 51 cm, support: height 71.6 cm x width 52.5 cm
  • Physical characteristicsoil on panel

anonymous

Twins in Swaddling-Clothes: the Children of Jacob de Graeff and Aeltge Boelens, who Died in Infancy

c. 1617

Inscriptions

  • inscription, top centre:den 7 April 1617
  • coat of arms, top left and top right: quartered: 1 and 4, a reversed vertical silver spade on a red field; 2 and 3, a silver falcon with red cap and spurs on a blue field

Technical notes

The support consists of three planks with a vertical grain and is bevelled at the top and bottom. The left plank is relatively narrow, approximately 4.8 cm in width. The thin ground layer, visible at the edges, is whitish. The paint layers were smoothly applied, with visible brushstrokes in the swaddling-clothes and faces.


Scientific examination and reports

  • technical report: L. Sozzani, RMA, 24 augustus 2004

Condition

Fair. There are several discoloured areas of retouching, while the varnish has yellowed and is irregular.


Conservation

  • conservator unknown, 1903: restored
  • H.H. Mertens, 1969: complete restoration

Provenance

? Commissioned by or for Jacob Dircksz de Graeff (1571-1638) and his wife Aeltge Boelens (1579-1620), Amsterdam; ? his eldest son, Cornelis de Graeff (1599-1664); estate inventory, his eldest son, Pieter de Graeff (1638-1707), Amsterdam, 9 March 1709, attic room (‘Een schilderije van twee gebakerde kindertjens’);1GPI, N-470. estate inventory, Pieter de Graeff (1638-1707), Huis Ilpenstein, Ilpendam, 16 July 1710, alcove room (‘twee kinderen in de baker’);2Moelker 1978, pp. 64, 68. ? by descent to Christina Elisabeth de Graeff (1795-1872);3Moelker 1978, pp. 192-93. sale, Kasteel Ilpenstein (Ilpendam), Amsterdam (C.F. Roos), 3 December 1872, no. 51, fl. 77, to Bunte;4Copy RKD.…; purchased by the museum, 1884;5Verslagen 1884, p. 36. on loan to the Rijksmuseum Muiderslot, Muiden, since 1949

Object number: SK-A-981


Entry

This soberly executed painting displays the portraits of the swaddled twins of Jacob Dircksz de Graeff (1571-1638) and his wife Aeltge Boelens (1579-1620), who according to the inscription were born on 7 April 1617. At top right and left are the father’s coat of arms, and since neither of them is a lozenge the children may both have been boys.6For a description of the arms see Elias II, 1905, p. 1081.

Although the babies are shown with their eyes open, without any funerary attributes or vanitas symbolism, this painting is rightly regarded as a death portrait.7Coll. cat. 1976, p. 675, no. A 981; Sliggers 1998, p. 211. Dead children were usually portrayed lying on their deathbed,8See Bedaux 1998, pp. 107-08. but in a group portrait of the so-called Dordrecht quadruplets of 1621, three of the children are depicted in the same way as in the Rijksmuseum picture: erect, wrapped in swaddling-clothes and with their eyes open.9’s-Hertogenbosch, Het Noordbrabants Museum; illustrated in Bedaux 1998, p. 111.

According to the inscriptions, those three children died within a few days, but the one that died 90 minutes after birth is shown lying on her deathbed. The biographical data on the De Graeff family confirm that these are twins who died soon after birth. Jacob Dircksz de Graeff had five children who reached adulthood, and they were all born before 1617.10Elias I, 1903, pp. 266-67. The archives also reveal that on 9 April 1617, Jan, son of De Graeff and Boelens, was baptized in the Oude Kerk in Amsterdam, and then on 11 April a ‘child of De Graeff’ was buried in the same church.11GAA, DTB no. 5, p. 213, no. 1044, p. 21: ‘(...) kint van Graef’, respectively. It is likely that the other child was stillborn or died almost immediately after birth, and cannot be found in the archives for that reason.

The baby on the left has a rather ruddy face, while the one on the right is remarkably pale. This difference in colour is a symptom of twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome, a serious condition that can have fatal consequences, and it was recently suggested that the De Graeff twins died as a result of it.12Berger et al. 2000; De Waard 2000, pp. 39-41. Another possibility is that the painter used the difference in colour to distinguish Jan from his twin brother, who had died before him.

The sober execution gives this portrait the nature of a historical document for future generations, in this case of a prominent Amsterdam family.13For portraits of various members of De Graeff’s family see Dudok van Heel in Amsterdam 2002a, pp. 110-11, pp. 118-19, no. 21a (ill.); De Bell/Middelkoop in Amsterdam 2002a, pp. 132-36, nos. 31a, 32-34 (ill.). The portrait can be dated around 1617, the year given in the inscription. No attribution can be made for the time being.

Yvette Bruijnen, 2007

See Bibliography and Rijksmuseum painting catalogues
See Key to abbreviations and Acknowledgements

This entry was published in J. Bikker (ed.), Dutch Paintings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, I: Artists Born between 1570 and 1600, coll. cat. Amsterdam 2007, no. 418.


Literature

Florusbosch-Voeten 1988, pp. 28-29; Ekkart 1998b, p. 79; Sliggers 1998, p. 211; De Waard 2000, pp. 39-41


Collection catalogues

1903, p. 19, no. 205; 1976, p. 675, no. A 981; 2007, no. 418


Citation

Y. Bruijnen, 2007, 'anonymous, Twins in Swaddling-Clothes: the Children of Jacob de Graeff and Aeltge Boelens, who Died in Infancy, c. 1617', in J. Bikker (ed.), Dutch Paintings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: https://data.rijksmuseum.nl/200108641

(accessed 30 November 2025 12:44:52).

Footnotes

  • 1GPI, N-470.
  • 2Moelker 1978, pp. 64, 68.
  • 3Moelker 1978, pp. 192-93.
  • 4Copy RKD.
  • 5Verslagen 1884, p. 36.
  • 6For a description of the arms see Elias II, 1905, p. 1081.
  • 7Coll. cat. 1976, p. 675, no. A 981; Sliggers 1998, p. 211.
  • 8See Bedaux 1998, pp. 107-08.
  • 9’s-Hertogenbosch, Het Noordbrabants Museum; illustrated in Bedaux 1998, p. 111.
  • 10Elias I, 1903, pp. 266-67.
  • 11GAA, DTB no. 5, p. 213, no. 1044, p. 21: ‘(...) kint van Graef’, respectively.
  • 12Berger et al. 2000; De Waard 2000, pp. 39-41.
  • 13For portraits of various members of De Graeff’s family see Dudok van Heel in Amsterdam 2002a, pp. 110-11, pp. 118-19, no. 21a (ill.); De Bell/Middelkoop in Amsterdam 2002a, pp. 132-36, nos. 31a, 32-34 (ill.).