Portretbuste van Anna Carolina van der Togt (1883-1970)

Bart van Hove, in of voor 1904

  • Soort kunstwerkbeeldhouwwerk
  • ObjectnummerBK-1974-3
  • Afmetingenhoogte 59,5 cm x breedte 34 cm x diepte 25 cm x gewicht (eigenschap) 10,1 kg
  • Fysieke kenmerkengips met witte verf

Identificatie

  • Titel(s)

    Portretbuste van Anna Carolina van der Togt (1883-1970)

  • Objecttype

  • Objectnummer

    BK-1974-3

  • Opschriften / Merken

    signatuur, linkerzijde van de pedestal, integraal gegoten: ‘

    Bart van Hove

  • Onderdeel van catalogus


Vervaardiging

  • Vervaardiging

    beeldhouwer: Bart van Hove, Amsterdam

  • Datering

    in of voor 1904

  • Zoek verder op


Materiaal en techniek

  • Fysieke kenmerken

    gips met witte verf

  • Afmetingen

    hoogte 59,5 cm x breedte 34 cm x diepte 25 cm x gewicht (eigenschap) 10,1 kg


Verwerving en rechten

  • Credit line

    Schenking van T. van Leeuwen

  • Verwerving

    schenking 1974

  • Copyright

  • Herkomst

    …; from the sitter presented or bequeathed to Th. van Leeuwen, c. 1970; by whom, donated to the museum, 1974


Duurzaam webadres


Bart van Hove

Portrait Bust of Anna Carolina van der Togt (1883-1970)

Amsterdam, in or before 1904

Inscriptions

  • signature, left side of the pedestal, integrally cast: Bart van Hove

Technical notes

Gegoten met behulp van een mal.


Condition

The corners and bottom edge have sustained damage.


Provenance

…; from the sitter presented or bequeathed to Th. van Leeuwen, c. 1970; by whom, donated to the museum, 1974

Object number: BK-1974-3

Credit line: Gift of T. van Leeuwen


Entry

The sculptor Bartholomeus Johannes Wilhelmus Maria (‘Bart’) van Hove (1850-1914) made the model for this austere portrait of Anna Carolina van der Togt – then about twenty years of age – probably in or shortly before 1904, the year in which the bust was first exhibited, at the Amsterdam art society Arti et Amicitiae. The portrait is highly characteristic of the sculptor’s work. Born into an artistic family in The Hague and later to destined to become one of the most successful society sculptors in the Netherlands at this time, Van Hove’s renown as a portraitist began to flourish with a series of royal commissions, which – ensuing Queen Wilhelmina’s coronation in 1898 – earned him the title of beeldhouwer der koningin (sculptor to the queen) (cf. BK-B-115 and BK-2004-9).1Notice placed in De Courant (Amsterdam edition, 10 February 1914) on the occasion of Van Hove’s death. P.K. van Daalen, Nederlandse beeldhouwers in de negentiende eeuw, The Hague 1957, pp. 170 (no. 29), 172 (nos. 37-40), 174 (no. 48), 175 (nos. 51, 52), 176 (no. 59). Van Hove’s traditional style was formed by his artistic training with Lacomblé at the art academy in The Hague, Jozef Geefs in Antwerp (1874) and lastly P.J. Cavelier in Paris. Even if outdated by 1900, this French academism was still much in demand among a more conservative clientele.2Cited biographical information comes from P.K. van Daalen, Nederlandse beeldhouwers in de negentiende eeuw, The Hague 1957, pp. 163-64; Y. Koopmans, Muurvast & Gebeiteld: Beeldhouwkunst in de bouw 1840-1940, Rotterdam 1997, pp. 45-48, 52, 53, 291-92; W. Burgers, ‘Bart van Hove (1850-1914): de laatste statuaire van de 19de eeuw’, Bulletin van het Rijksmuseum 53 (2005), pp. 179-91.

With a somewhat dreamy gaze, Anna van der Togt tilts her head slightly to the right. She wears her hair in a bun at the nape of neck. The portrait ends below the shoulders and terminates in front with a deftly tied drapery knot. The bust rests on a slightly expanding block-shaped pedestal, adorned in front with a single rose stem rendered in relief. The sculpture is a replica of a marble version, the present whereabouts of which are presently unknown.3In 1974, the bust was in the possession of the sitter’s son, C.C. Berlage in Winterswijk. Anna Carolina van der Togt was the second child of Johannes van der Togt (1849-1931), a teacher in Leiden, and Christina van Dijk (1853-1941). Her family had moved to Amsterdam when she was an infant.4See Stadsarchief Amsterdam (hereafter: SAA), archive 5000 (Bevolkingsregister 1974-1893), inv. no. 1630. In 1907, she married the Amsterdam merchant and real estate agent Clemens Joseph Heinrich Berlage (1881-1945), whom she divorced in 1929.5SAA, archive 30238 (Archiefkaarten), inv. no. 1865. Anna Carolina died in or shortly before October 1970. The bust might possibly have been given as an engagement gift by her fiancé, who, like the sculptor resided in Amsterdam. Nevertheless, the precise motivation remains unclear.

Frits Scholten, 2026


Literature

Eerste gedeelte der tentoonstelling van teekeningen en beeldhouwwerken vervaardigd door leden der maatschappij, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Arti et Amicitiae), November-December 1904, no. 97-130


Citation

F. Scholten, 2026, 'Bart van Hove, Portrait Bust of Anna Carolina van der Togt (1883-1970), Amsterdam, in or before 1904', in F. Scholten and B. van der Mark (eds.), European Sculpture in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: https://data.rijksmuseum.nl/20036359

(accessed 20 juni 2026 04:54:31 UTC+0).

Footnotes

  • 1Notice placed in De Courant (Amsterdam edition, 10 February 1914) on the occasion of Van Hove’s death. P.K. van Daalen, Nederlandse beeldhouwers in de negentiende eeuw, The Hague 1957, pp. 170 (no. 29), 172 (nos. 37-40), 174 (no. 48), 175 (nos. 51, 52), 176 (no. 59).
  • 2Cited biographical information comes from P.K. van Daalen, Nederlandse beeldhouwers in de negentiende eeuw, The Hague 1957, pp. 163-64; Y. Koopmans, Muurvast & Gebeiteld: Beeldhouwkunst in de bouw 1840-1940, Rotterdam 1997, pp. 45-48, 52, 53, 291-92; W. Burgers, ‘Bart van Hove (1850-1914): de laatste statuaire van de 19de eeuw’, Bulletin van het Rijksmuseum 53 (2005), pp. 179-91.
  • 3In 1974, the bust was in the possession of the sitter’s son, C.C. Berlage in Winterswijk.
  • 4See Stadsarchief Amsterdam (hereafter: SAA), archive 5000 (Bevolkingsregister 1974-1893), inv. no. 1630.
  • 5SAA, archive 30238 (Archiefkaarten), inv. no. 1865.