Aan de slag met de collectie:
Portret van Gijsbert van der Hoeven
Jan Thopas, 1657
Portret van Gijsbert van der Hoeven; links een wapenschild, rechts een lauwerkrans.
- Soort kunstwerktekening
- ObjectnummerRP-T-1894-A-2834
- Afmetingenhoogte 166 mm x breedte 141 mm
- Fysieke kenmerkenloodstift, met penseel en zwarte en grijze inkt, op perkament
Identificatie
Titel(s)
- Portret van een onbekende heer (voormalige titel)
- Portret van Gijsbert van der Hoeven
Objecttype
Objectnummer
RP-T-1894-A-2834
Beschrijving
Portret van Gijsbert van der Hoeven; links een wapenschild, rechts een lauwerkrans.
Onderdeel van catalogus
Vervaardiging
Vervaardiging
tekenaar: Jan Thopas, Amsterdam (mogelijk)
Datering
1657
Zoek verder op
Materiaal en techniek
Fysieke kenmerken
loodstift, met penseel en zwarte en grijze inkt, op perkament
Afmetingen
hoogte 166 mm x breedte 141 mm
Dit werk gaat over
Onderwerp
Verwerving en rechten
Verwerving
aankoop 1894
Copyright
Herkomst
…; from the dealer H.J. Valk, Amsterdam, fl. 20, to the museum (L. 2228), 1894
Documentatie
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Jan Thopas
Portrait of Gijsbert van der Hoeven
? Amsterdam, 1657
Inscriptions
signed and dated, in black ink: lower left, Johannes ThoPas; lower right, Fecit 1657
stamped on verso: lower centre, with the mark of the museum (L. 2228)
Condition
Abrasions over the entire sheet, damages at upper right; cockled on right half
Provenance
…; from the dealer H.J. Valk, Amsterdam, fl. 20, to the museum (L. 2228), 1894
Object number: RP-T-1894-A-2834
The artist
Biography
Johannes Thopas (Arnhem 1625 - probably Zaandam before 1695)
He grew up in Utrecht and Emmerich, where his mother’s second husband, Johannes Wijer (?-?), served as burgomaster. Thopas, who was born deaf, was probably self-taught. He does not feature in art-historical biographies from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. But from the early twentieth century, he was the ‘most prolific of the great plumbago (leadpoint) artists of the Rembrandt period’ and a ‘master of chiaroscuro’ who managed to make the ‘characters of his sitters leap out at us.’1W. Mills, ‘Dutch Plumbagos: The Clements Collection’, The Connoisseur 37 (1913), pp. 153-60 (esp. p. 155). Because of his deafness, he lived with family members his entire life and needed the help of a guardian in all official matters. He started to draw portraits while still in Utrecht in the mid-1640s, the earliest known examples being the Portrait of a Man and the Portrait of a Woman, each dated 1646, in the Frits Lugt Collection, Fondation Custodia, Paris (inv. nos. 1971-PM 4 and 1971-PM 5).2R.E.O. Ekkart, Deaf, Dumb & Brilliant: Johannes Thopas, Master Draughtsman, exh. cat. Aachen (Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum)/Amsterdam (Museum Het Rembrandthuis) 2014, nos. 1-2. His approach to portraiture followed the example set by Utrecht painters such as Jan van Bijlert (1597/98-1671).3Ibid., p. 43. From circa 1656-57 to 1662, Thopas lived in Amsterdam. In the course of the 1660s, he moved to Haarlem, where he entered the Guild of St Luke in 1668. In 1672, he must have moved to Assendelft, and he probably spent the last years of his life in Zaandam, where his sister (and then caretaker) Jacoba Thopas (?-before 1695) drew up her will in 1688.
Despite the sheltered life Thopas led, as an artist he was sought after by the rich and influential. His oeuvre consists of more than sixty portrait drawings on vellum, including some commissioned by members of highly respected Dutch families. His last dated drawings is a pair from 1684, the Portrait of a Man and the Portrait of a Woman in the Victoria & Albert Museum, London (inv. nos. P.26-1952 and P.27-1952).4J. Shoaf Turner and C. White, Dutch & Flemish Drawings in the Victoria and Albert Museum, 2 vols., coll. cat. London 2014, I, nos. 205-06; R.E.O. Ekkart, Deaf, Dumb & Brilliant: Johannes Thopas, Master Draughtsman, exh. cat. Aachen (Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum)/Amsterdam (Museum Het Rembrandthuis) 2014, nos. 65-66. There is only one known painting by the artist, Girl on her Deathbed in the Mauritshuis, The Hague (inv. no. 1159).5Ibid., no. 67.
Annemarie Stefes, 2018
References
W. Mills, ‘Dutch Plumbagos: The Clements Collection’, The Connoisseur 37 (1913), pp. 153-60 (esp. p. 155); R.E.O. Ekkart, Deaf, Dumb & Brilliant: Johannes Thopas, Master Draughtsman, exh. cat. Aachen (Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum)/Amsterdam (Museum Het Rembrandthuis) 2014, pp. 15-23
Entry
The coat of arms at upper left (a shield charged with a leaping dear) was used in the seventeenth century by the Rotterdam family of the sitter, Gijsbert van der Hoeven (?-?),6According to Nederland’s patriciaat, 92 vols., The Hague 1910-, XVI (1926), p. 138. about whom nothing is known except for the fact that he married Abigael van Halewijn (1634-1691) in Amsterdam on 1 April 1655.7Amsterdam, Stadsarchief, DTB 474, p. 249. Abigael was the subject of a lost companion portrait by Thopas, formerly in the collection of Anthony Hendrik Martens, Arnhem, but destroyed by fire in 1944.8R.E.O. Ekkart, Deaf, Dumb & Brilliant: Johannes Thopas, Master Draughtsman, exh. cat. Aachen (Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum)/Amsterdam (Museum Het Rembrandthuis) 2014, pp. 51, 113, no. 12. Dated 1656, the year before the present sheet, it was nearly identical in technique, format (180 x 140 mm) and design, with a laurel wreath at upper right and her coat of arms at upper left.
When Johannes Thopas drew the married couple, he had probably already settled in Amsterdam. However, the portraits still follow the simpler scheme of his earlier drawings, placing the bust of the sitter in a drawn oval frame against a plain background. In the present sheet, the trompe-l’oeil effect is not as obvious as in the companion piece, where Abigael’s hand and scarf extend beyond the frame. That was the first truly illusionistic effect in Thopas’s oeuvre.9Ibid., p. 51.
Annemarie Stefes, 2018
Literature
R.E.O. Ekkart, Deaf, Dumb & Brilliant: Johannes Thopas, Master Draughtsman, exh. cat. Aachen (Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum)/Amsterdam (Museum Het Rembrandthuis) 2014, pp. 51, 114, no. 13
Citation
A. Stefes, 2018, 'Jan Thopas, Portrait of Gijsbert van der Hoeven, Amsterdam, 1657', in J. Turner (ed.), Dutch Drawings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: https://data.rijksmuseum.nl/200144598
(accessed 13 December 2025 15:39:49).Footnotes
- 1W. Mills, ‘Dutch Plumbagos: The Clements Collection’, The Connoisseur 37 (1913), pp. 153-60 (esp. p. 155).
- 2R.E.O. Ekkart, Deaf, Dumb & Brilliant: Johannes Thopas, Master Draughtsman, exh. cat. Aachen (Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum)/Amsterdam (Museum Het Rembrandthuis) 2014, nos. 1-2.
- 3Ibid., p. 43.
- 4J. Shoaf Turner and C. White, Dutch & Flemish Drawings in the Victoria and Albert Museum, 2 vols., coll. cat. London 2014, I, nos. 205-06; R.E.O. Ekkart, Deaf, Dumb & Brilliant: Johannes Thopas, Master Draughtsman, exh. cat. Aachen (Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum)/Amsterdam (Museum Het Rembrandthuis) 2014, nos. 65-66.
- 5Ibid., no. 67.
- 6According to Nederland’s patriciaat, 92 vols., The Hague 1910-, XVI (1926), p. 138.
- 7Amsterdam, Stadsarchief, DTB 474, p. 249.
- 8R.E.O. Ekkart, Deaf, Dumb & Brilliant: Johannes Thopas, Master Draughtsman, exh. cat. Aachen (Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum)/Amsterdam (Museum Het Rembrandthuis) 2014, pp. 51, 113, no. 12.
- 9Ibid., p. 51.





