Portrait of Johan van Someren (1622-76)

Cornelis Janssens van Ceulen I (signed by artist), 1650

Portret van Johan van Someren. Ten halven lijve, zittend aan een tafel waarop een opengeslagen boek ligt. De linkerhand ligt op het boek, de rechterhand op de borst. Pendant van SK-A-3858.

  • Artwork typepainting
  • Object numberSK-A-3857
  • Dimensionsouter size: depth 4.5 cm (support incl. frame), support: height 85 cm x width 73 cm
  • Physical characteristicsoil on canvas

Cornelis Janssens van Ceulen I

Portrait of Johan van Someren (1622-76)

1650

Inscriptions

  • signature and date, centre left:C.J. v Ceulen. / fecit. 1650
  • label, on the reverse:Mr. Jo[.]an van Someren, geboren 3 Juli 1622 / Raad Pensionaris van Nijmegen / overleden 22 December 1676 / trouwt 9 Mei 1648 met / Elizabeth Ver[...] / geb[...] / over[...] / hebben een d[...] / geboren [...] / tro[...] / Mr. Zeger [...] / Hoven van [...] / geboren(Mr. Jo[.]an van Someren, born 3 July 1622, Pensionary of Nijmegen, died 22 December 1676, marries 9 May 1648 Elizabeth Ver[...], bor[...], die[...] , have a d[...], born [...], marr[...] Mr Zeger [...], Courts of [...], born)

Technical notes

The support is a lined, fine-weave canvas missing its original tacking edges, and probably consists of two strips joined vertically. The paint was applied very smoothly over a light-coloured ground. Some underdrawing is visible in the sitter’s right eye. Pentimenti reveal that the position of the sitter’s right hand and the book on the table were altered.


Scientific examination and reports

  • technical report: M. van de Laar, RMA, 18 augustus 2004

Condition

Fair. The background is severely abraded. The varnish is discoloured, unevenly applied and has crazed in the background.


Original framing

Bifacial flat frames of ebonised conifer1Van Thiel and Kloek in Amsterdam 1984b, pp. 150-51, no. 28; Van Thiel and Kloek in Van Thiel/De Bruyn Kops 1995, pp. 196-97, no. 28.


Provenance

? Commissioned by Johan van Someren and Elisabeth Vervoorn; ? their daughter Clara van Someren (1654-1709); ? her son Jacob Tierens (1691-1760); ? his son Simon Tierens (1716-98); ? his son Seger Tierens (1749-94); ? his son Hendrik A.C. Tierens (1794-1851); ? his daughter Cornelia H.A. Tierens (1818-89); ? her daughter Cecilia G. Verhagen (1849-1934); her son Lieutenant-Colonel Marius C. van Houten, Doorn, Utrecht;2Provenance reconstructed by R.E.O. Ekkart, 2004. by whom donated to the museum, 1933, but kept in usufruct;3Note RMA. transferred to the museum, as attributed to Cornelis Janssens van Ceulen I, 1953

Object number: SK-A-3857

Credit line: Gift of M.C. van Houten, Doorn


The artist

Biography

Cornelis Janssens van Ceulen I (London 1593 - Utrecht 1661)

Cornelis Janssens van Ceulen, who signed his works as Jonson van Ceulen, was born into an Antwerp family that originally came from Cologne. He was baptized in London on 14 October 1593. It has been suggested that he was trained in the Netherlands. Janssens van Ceulen married Elisabeth Beck or Beke from Colchester on 16 July 1622, with whom he lived in Blackfriars. On 5 December 1632, he was appointed ‘his Majesty’s servant in the quality of picture maker to his Majesty’, King Charles I. In 1643, he and his family fled the Civil War and settled in Middelburg, where he entered the Guild of St Luke. In 1646 he is documented as living in Amsterdam. Six years later he was in Utrecht, where he and his wife made their will on 7 November 1652. He died in Utrecht in early August 1661.

Cornelis Janssens van Ceulen was a portrait painter. At the beginning of his career, much of his output consisted of bust-length portraits. In the Netherlands, he painted elegant half or three-quarter length figures that reveal the influence of Anthony van Dyck. There are also some group portraits, such as the Middelburg archers’ guild.4Middelburg, Town Hall; photo RKD. Cornelis Janssens van Ceulen II (1635-1715) was his pupil and a close follower.

Gerdien Wuestman, 2007

References
De Bie 1661, pp. 298-99; Von Sandrart 1675 (1925), p. 194; Houbraken II, 1719, pp. 224-25; Walpole 1862, I, pp. 211-15; Schneider in Thieme/Becker XIX, 1926, pp. 143-44; Edmond 1978, pp. 84-89; Ekkart in Turner 1996, XVII, pp. 644-46; Kollmann 2000, pp. 219-20; Hearn 2003


Entry

The sitters in this pendant pair are identified by the labels on the back of the paintings, which probably date from the early 19th century. Johan van Someren, who was born in Dordrecht on 3 July 1622, was the alderman responsible for waterways in Dordrecht, and Dike-Reeve of Oud-Beijerland. In 1655 he became Pensionary of Nijmegen. He died in 1676 in his birthplace of Dordrecht. Elisabeth Vervoorn of Gorinchem, whom he married in 1648, was the second of his three wives. Both Van Someren and Vervoorn enjoyed some fame as poets.5Scheltema 1823, pp. 138-43; Frederiks/Van den Branden 1887, p. 740.

Van Someren (shown here) and Vervoorn (see SK-A-3858) are shown half-length, seated against an indeterminate green-brown background. The pendants are still in their original frames.6See Original framing. The hand of Cornelis Janssens van Ceulen I is mainly recognizable in the soft, melting outlines. These portraits, which are related to the one of Jan Cornelisz Geelvinck dated 1646,7Amsterdams Historisch Museum. are among the most restrained works from the second half of the artist’s career. The attire is sober, there is no jewellery, and the sitters are in stilled poses. Van Someren has his right hand on his heart and his left hand on an open book, probably a Bible.8See Salomonson 1990, p. 276, for this pose. Vervoorn has her hands crossed, unlike the elegant hands, some of them fingering their pearl necklaces and bracelets, in many other portraits by this artist.9See, for example, the Portrait of Maria van Liere-Van Reygersbergen of 1651, Utrecht, Centraal Museum; illustrated in coll. cat. Utrecht 1999, II, p. 1021, no. 324.

Gerdien Wuestman, 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. 156.


Literature

Van Thiel and Kloek in Amsterdam 1984b, pp. 150-51, no. 28; Van Thiel and Kloek in Van Thiel/De Bruyn Kops 1995, no. 28


Collection catalogues

1976, p. 308, nos. A 3857, A 3858; 2007, no. 156


Citation

G. Wuestman, 2007, 'Cornelis (I) Jonson van Ceulen, Portrait of Johan van Someren (1622-76), 1650', in J. Bikker (ed.), Dutch Paintings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: https://data.rijksmuseum.nl/20028161

(accessed 10 December 2025 12:27:15).

Footnotes

  • 1Van Thiel and Kloek in Amsterdam 1984b, pp. 150-51, no. 28; Van Thiel and Kloek in Van Thiel/De Bruyn Kops 1995, pp. 196-97, no. 28.
  • 2Provenance reconstructed by R.E.O. Ekkart, 2004.
  • 3Note RMA.
  • 4Middelburg, Town Hall; photo RKD.
  • 5Scheltema 1823, pp. 138-43; Frederiks/Van den Branden 1887, p. 740.
  • 6See Original framing.
  • 7Amsterdams Historisch Museum.
  • 8See Salomonson 1990, p. 276, for this pose.
  • 9See, for example, the Portrait of Maria van Liere-Van Reygersbergen of 1651, Utrecht, Centraal Museum; illustrated in coll. cat. Utrecht 1999, II, p. 1021, no. 324.