Aan de slag met de collectie:
Medaillonportret van Friedrich Wilhelm II, de latere koning van Pruisen (1744-1797)
Johann Heinrich Schepp, 1784
De konig (gekroond in 1786), in profiel naar links gewend, draagt staartpruik met strik en onder een harnas met binnenvoering een hemd, waarvan de boord nog zichtbaar is. Over rug en schouder een mantel met ordeteken. Op het snijvlak van de linker arm de handtekening met de samengestelde initialen van beide voornamen JH en voluit SCHEPP fec. 1784.
- Soort kunstwerkbeeldhouwwerk
- ObjectnummerBK-NM-11002
- Afmetingendiameter 10,3 cm
- Fysieke kenmerkenwas
Identificatie
Titel(s)
Medaillonportret van Friedrich Wilhelm II, de latere koning van Pruisen (1744-1797)
Objecttype
Objectnummer
BK-NM-11002
Beschrijving
De konig (gekroond in 1786), in profiel naar links gewend, draagt staartpruik met strik en onder een harnas met binnenvoering een hemd, waarvan de boord nog zichtbaar is. Over rug en schouder een mantel met ordeteken. Op het snijvlak van de linker arm de handtekening met de samengestelde initialen van beide voornamen JH en voluit SCHEPP fec. 1784.
Onderdeel van catalogus
Vervaardiging
Vervaardiging
Johann Heinrich Schepp, Den Haag
Datering
1784
Zoek verder op
Materiaal en techniek
Fysieke kenmerken
was
Afmetingen
diameter 10,3 cm
Dit werk gaat over
Persoon
Onderwerp
Plaats
Periode
1770 - 1797
Verwerving en rechten
Copyright
Herkomst
? commissioned by Stadholder William V (1748-1806), Prince of Orange-Nassau, The Hague, 1784; …; from the Mauritshuis, The Hague, transferred to the museum, 1897
Documentatie
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Johann Heinrich Schepp
Portrait Medallion of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm, the Later King Friedrich Wilhelm II of Prussia (1744-1797)
The Hague, 1784
Inscriptions
Signed and dated, on the cut surface of the left arm, incised: JH SCHEPP fec. 1784 (the initials JH are in ligature)
Technical notes
Modelled in relief.
Condition
Large parts of the background and the profile frame have been filled in with wax. Complete with corresponding frame.
Provenance
? commissioned by Stadholder William V (1748-1806), Prince of Orange-Nassau, The Hague, 1784; …; from the Mauritshuis, The Hague, transferred to the museum, 1897
Object number: BK-NM-11002
Entry
This signed and dated wax medallion by Johann Heinrich Schepp (1736-1793) from 1784 is a portrait of the Prince of Prussia, the later King Friedrich Wilhelm II. Schepp, a gem-cutter and medallist of German origin, was probably commissioned to make the medallion by the subject’s brother-in-law, the Dutch Stadholder Prince William V, whose service Schepp had entered as court engraver and medallist a year earlier.1For Schepp, see A. Staring, ‘De medailleur J.H. Schepp en Frans Hemsterhuis’, Oud Holland 64 (1949), pp. 83-103 and M. Scharloo, ‘Drie creatieve geesten’, in F. Grijzenhout and C. Tuyll van Serooskerken, Edele eenvoud, neo-classicisme in Nederland 1765-1800, exh. cat. Haarlem (Frans Halsmuseum and Teylers Museum) 1989, pp. 99-101.
Reliefs of this type were modelled in wax to be replicated in plaster. The Rijksmuseum owns a cast of the present piece (BK-NM-254) which is one of series of six plaster medallion portraits of members of the House of Orange and their Prussian relatives (BK-NM-255 to -259).2In the Rijksmuseum inventory book, the arrival of three extremely damaged fragments of the wax model of Prince William V’s medallion (NM-11001) was registered, but their present whereabouts are unknown.
After his appointment as court medallist in Kassel and Frankfurt am Main, Schepp came to the Netherlands around 1770, in the wake of the German Count of Waldeck, who later also introduced the important portrait-painter, Johann Friedrich August Tischbein (1750-1812) here. In The Hague, Schepp attracted the attention of Frans Hemsterhuis (1721-1790), the well-known philosopher and curator of the stadhouder’s collection of medals and antiquities. He asked Schepp to make a number of his innovative, neo-classical designs, including, in 1781, the medal commemorating the Battle of Dogger Bank (NG-NM-10325-1).3See F. Grijzenhout and C. Tuyll van Serooskerken, Edele eenvoud, neo-classicisme in Nederland 1765-1800, exh. cat. Haarlem (Frans Halsmuseum and Teylers Museum) 1989, no. 97.
The most successful collaboration between Hemsterhuis and Schepp is indubitably the medal commemorating the death of the celebrated doctor Petrus Camper of 1789 (NG-VG-1-2966).4See F. Grijzenhout and C. Tuyll van Serooskerken, Edele eenvoud, neo-classicisme in Nederland 1765-1800, exh. cat. Haarlem (Frans Halsmuseum and Teylers Museum) 1989, no. 98. The difference between that portrait medallion and the one featured here could hardly be greater. Whereas Camper is portrayed in accordance with the clear, neo-classicist, unadorned idiom, Friedrich Wilhelm II is represented in graceful rococo lines and wearing a wig with side rolls and a queue. This far more decorative style is characteristic for Schepp’s own designs and at that stage was still popular for portrait medallions.
We do not know whether there had been a specific reason for William V to have the portrait medallion made. It might have been intended as a gift to his Prussian relatives. At all events, there were close ties between the two families, as demonstrated by Friedrich Wilhelm II’s resolute intervention a few years later, when his army joined the stadholder’s troops in crushing the Dutch Patriotic Revolution (cf. NG-VG-1-2940) that had heated up through the spring and summer of 1787.5Staring assumed, mistakenly, that the medallions depicting Friedrich II and Friedrich Wilhelm II were added to the series only in 1787-88. Apparently he overlooked the dating of 1784, see A. Staring, ‘De medailleur J.H. Schepp en Frans Hemsterhuis’, Oud Holland 64 (1949), pp. 83-103, esp. p. 100.
Bieke van der Mark, 2026
Citation
B. van der Mark, 2026, 'Johann Heinrich Schepp, Portrait Medallion of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm, the Later King Friedrich Wilhelm II of Prussia (1744-1797), The Hague, 1784', in F. Scholten and B. van der Mark (eds.), European Sculpture in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: https://data.rijksmuseum.nl/20035867
(accessed 3 February 2026 22:17:14).Footnotes
- 1For Schepp, see A. Staring, ‘De medailleur J.H. Schepp en Frans Hemsterhuis’, Oud Holland 64 (1949), pp. 83-103 and M. Scharloo, ‘Drie creatieve geesten’, in F. Grijzenhout and C. Tuyll van Serooskerken, Edele eenvoud, neo-classicisme in Nederland 1765-1800, exh. cat. Haarlem (Frans Halsmuseum and Teylers Museum) 1989, pp. 99-101.
- 2In the Rijksmuseum inventory book, the arrival of three extremely damaged fragments of the wax model of Prince William V’s medallion (NM-11001) was registered, but their present whereabouts are unknown.
- 3See F. Grijzenhout and C. Tuyll van Serooskerken, Edele eenvoud, neo-classicisme in Nederland 1765-1800, exh. cat. Haarlem (Frans Halsmuseum and Teylers Museum) 1989, no. 97.
- 4See F. Grijzenhout and C. Tuyll van Serooskerken, Edele eenvoud, neo-classicisme in Nederland 1765-1800, exh. cat. Haarlem (Frans Halsmuseum and Teylers Museum) 1989, no. 98.
- 5Staring assumed, mistakenly, that the medallions depicting Friedrich II and Friedrich Wilhelm II were added to the series only in 1787-88. Apparently he overlooked the dating of 1784, see A. Staring, ‘De medailleur J.H. Schepp en Frans Hemsterhuis’, Oud Holland 64 (1949), pp. 83-103, esp. p. 100.