Cornelis Pietersz. Bega (attributed to)

Standing Man, Holding a Pitcher in his Right Hand

1650 - 1664

Inscriptions

  • inscribed: lower right, in brown ink, Bega

  • inscribed on verso: lower centre (with the sheet turned 90°), in pencil, 405 (encircled)

  • stamped: lower left, with the mark of Argoutinsky Dolgoroukoff (L. 2602d)

  • stamped on verso: lower centre, with the mark of the museum (L. 2228)


Technical notes

Watermark: None


Condition

Foxing


Provenance

...; collection Prince Wladimir Nikolaevitch Argoutinsky-Dolgoroukoff (1875-1941), Paris and St Petersburg (L. 2602d); his sale, Amsterdam (R.W.P. de Vries), 27 March 1925, no. 14, fl. 10, to ‘Beets’;1Copy RMA. …; collection Franz W. Koenigs (1881-1941), Cologne and Haarlem; by whose heirs donated to the museum (L. 2228), 1965

ObjectNumber: RP-T-1965-305

Credit line: Gift of the heirs of F. Koenigs, Heemstede


The artist

Biography

Cornelis Bega (Haarlem 1631/32 - Haarlem 1664)

Baptized on 22 (?) January 1632, he was the youngest son of a prosperous Catholic family of artists in Haarlem. His father, Pieter Jansz Begijn (1600/05-1648), was a goldsmith, silversmith and sculptor, and his mother, Maria Cornelisdr (1611-1681), was the daughter of the renowned Mannerist artist Cornelis Cornelisz van Haarlem (1562-1638), half of whose estate (gold, silver, paintings, drawings and prints) she inherited. Bega was almost certainly named for his maternal grandfather. His brother Dominicus Jansz Bagijn (?-1636) was a carver, and several of his paternal forebears were civic architects, including his grandfather, Jan Pietersz Bagijn (?-1628), his great-grandfather Pieter Pietersz Bagijn (?-1600); and his uncle Claes Pietersz Bagijn (1558-1632), whose son (i.e. Bega’s cousin) was the still-life painter Willem Claesz. Heda (1594-1680), who took the name of his mother. Another cousin, on his father’s side, was the decorative painter Pieter de Grebber (c. 1600-1652/53).

According to Houbraken, Bega studied under Adriaen van Ostade (1610-1685).2A. Houbraken, De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen, 3 vols., Amsterdam 1718-21, I (1718), p. 349; M.A. Scott, Cornelis Bega (1631/32-1664) as Painter and Draughtsman, 2 vols., Ann Arbor (MI) 1984 (PhD diss., University of Maryland), I, pp. 8-9, 28. This was presumably before 24 April 1653, when he embarked on a journey through Germany, Switzerland and France, in the company of fellow Haarlemmers Vincent Laurensz van der Vinne (1628-1702) and Joost Boelen (?-?).3B. Sliggers (ed.), Dagelijkse aentekeninge van Vincent Laurensz van der Vinne, Haarlem 1979, pp. 28-29, 35. Bega was certainly back in Haarlem by September 1654, when he joined the Guild of St Luke, in which he was active for a decade, until 1664 (the year of his untimely death, probably from the plague).4M.A. Scott, Cornelis Bega (1631/32-1664) as Painter and Draughtsman, 2 vols., Ann Arbor (MI) 1984 (PhD diss., University of Maryland), I, pp. 13, 16. The costs of his expensive funeral at the church of St Bavo, Haarlem, were paid on 30 August 1664.5Haarlem, Noord-Hollands Archief, DTB 75, fol. 165: ‘Grote Kerk, “middentransept nr. 432”, begrafenisgeld 21 gulden’.

As a painter, Bega was strongly influenced by the genre works of his teacher Ostade, but as a draughtsman he belonged to a distinctive group of Haarlem artists, including Gerrit Berckheyde (1638-1698) and Leendert van der Cooghen (1632-1681), who from the 1650s onwards developed a style of figure drawing – mostly single figure studies – characterized by highly precise delineation and sharp hatching.6P. Schatborn, Dutch Figure Drawings from the Seventeenth Century, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Rijksprentenkabinet)/Washington (DC) (National Gallery of Art) 1981-82, p. 99. These studies were executed mostly in red chalk on white paper or black and white chalk on blue paper. Bega’s figure drawings can be recognized by their regular hatching, pronounced light and dark contrasts, and clearly demarcated forms.

Carolyn Mensing, 2019

References
A. Houbraken, De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen, 3 vols., Amsterdam 1718-21, I (1718), pp. 349-50; M.A. Scott, Cornelis Bega (1631/32-1664) as Painter and Draughtsman, 2 vols., Ann Arbor 1984 (PhD diss., University of Maryland); M.A. Scott in J. Turner (ed.), The Dictionary of Art, 34 vols., London/New York 1996, III, p. 495; M.A. Scott, ‘Bega, Cornelis’, in J. Turner (ed.), The Grove Dictionary of Art: From Rembrandt to Vermeer. 17th-century Dutch Artists, London 2000, pp. 16-17; I. van Thiel-Stroman, ‘Cornelis Pietersz Bega’, in P. Biesboer and N. Köhler (eds.), Painting in Haarlem, 1500-1850: The Collection of the Frans Hals Museum, coll. cat. Haarlem 2006, pp. 100-02; P. Biesboer, ‘Cornelis Bega (Haarlem, 1631-1664): Eine Biografie’, in P. van den Brink and B.W. Lindemann (eds.), Cornelis Bega: Eleganz und raue Sitten, exh. cat. Aachen (Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum)/Berlin (Gemäldegalerie) 2012, pp. 25-29


Entry

This drawing is missing some of the trademarks of Bega's draughtsmanship. The figure lacks volume, and the hatching is not very crisp and does not align with the body. Furthermore, the contrast between light and dark is marked differently. This notwithstanding, the drawing style is closer to Bega’s than that of the other known artists in his Haarlem circle. Perhaps it is an early work. A comparable study, formerly in the Van Regteren Altena collection,7His heirs' sale, Amsterdam (Christie’s), 10 December 2014, no. 191; B. Schnackenburg, Adriaen van Ostade, Isack van Ostade: Zeichnungen und Aquarelle: Gesamtdarstellung mit Werkkatalogen, 2 vols., Hamburg 1981, I, p. 201, no. Z2, fig. 65 on p. 276 (doubtful attribution to A. van Ostade). featuring a similar man with a pointed chin (now seated), drawn next to sketches of hands and a head, may also be an early work by Bega, done when he was still under the influence of his teacher, Adriaen van Ostade (1610-1685).

Bonny van Sighem, 2000/Carolyn Mensing, 2019


Citation

B. van Sighem, 2000/C. Mensing, 2019, 'attributed to Cornelis Pietersz. Bega, Standing Man, Holding a Pitcher in his Right Hand, 1650 - 1664', in J. Turner (ed.), Dutch Drawings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.28298

(accessed 10 July 2025 02:13:27).

Footnotes

  • 1Copy RMA.
  • 2A. Houbraken, De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen, 3 vols., Amsterdam 1718-21, I (1718), p. 349; M.A. Scott, Cornelis Bega (1631/32-1664) as Painter and Draughtsman, 2 vols., Ann Arbor (MI) 1984 (PhD diss., University of Maryland), I, pp. 8-9, 28.
  • 3B. Sliggers (ed.), Dagelijkse aentekeninge van Vincent Laurensz van der Vinne, Haarlem 1979, pp. 28-29, 35.
  • 4M.A. Scott, Cornelis Bega (1631/32-1664) as Painter and Draughtsman, 2 vols., Ann Arbor (MI) 1984 (PhD diss., University of Maryland), I, pp. 13, 16.
  • 5Haarlem, Noord-Hollands Archief, DTB 75, fol. 165: ‘Grote Kerk, “middentransept nr. 432”, begrafenisgeld 21 gulden’.
  • 6P. Schatborn, Dutch Figure Drawings from the Seventeenth Century, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Rijksprentenkabinet)/Washington (DC) (National Gallery of Art) 1981-82, p. 99.
  • 7His heirs' sale, Amsterdam (Christie’s), 10 December 2014, no. 191; B. Schnackenburg, Adriaen van Ostade, Isack van Ostade: Zeichnungen und Aquarelle: Gesamtdarstellung mit Werkkatalogen, 2 vols., Hamburg 1981, I, p. 201, no. Z2, fig. 65 on p. 276 (doubtful attribution to A. van Ostade).