Aan de slag met de collectie:
Jagers, rustend in een Italiaans landschap
Jan Asselijn, ca. 1636 - ca. 1646
Jagers met honden houden rust, terwijl een jager zijn zadel aangordt; rechts een lastezel; links op de achtergrond enige antieke gebouwen.
- Soort kunstwerktekening
- ObjectnummerRP-T-1899-A-4285(R)
- Afmetingenhoogte 269 mm x breedte 403 mm
- Fysieke kenmerkenzwart en wit krijt, met penseel en grijze inkt, op blauw papier; kaderlijnen in zwart krijt
Ontdek verder
Identificatie
Titel(s)
Jagers, rustend in een Italiaans landschap
Objecttype
Objectnummer
RP-T-1899-A-4285(R)
Beschrijving
Jagers met honden houden rust, terwijl een jager zijn zadel aangordt; rechts een lastezel; links op de achtergrond enige antieke gebouwen.
Onderdeel van catalogus
Vervaardiging
Vervaardiging
- tekenaar: Jan Asselijn
- tekenaar: Pieter Bodding van Laer [verworpen toeschrijving]
Datering
ca. 1636 - ca. 1646
Zoek verder op
Materiaal en techniek
Fysieke kenmerken
zwart en wit krijt, met penseel en grijze inkt, op blauw papier; kaderlijnen in zwart krijt
Afmetingen
hoogte 269 mm x breedte 403 mm
Dit werk gaat over
Onderwerp
Verwerving en rechten
Verwerving
aankoop 1899
Copyright
Herkomst
…; ? collection Abraham van Broyel (?-1759 or before), Amsterdam;{According to the catalogue for the sale, William Pitcairn Knowles, Amsterdam (F. Muller), 25 June 1895 sqq., no. 379.} his sale, Amsterdam (H. de Leth), 30 October 1759 sqq., no. 678, as Pieter van Laer (‘Een Italiaansche Pleisteir-plaats by een Ruine, zeer fraai op blaauw Papier met zwart kryt en Oost-Indische Ink ten wit gehoogd, hoog 11, breed 16 duim. [275 x 406 mm]’), fl. 18:15:- to Johann Edler Goll von Franckenstein (1722-85), Amsterdam and Velzen;{Copy RKD.} …; ? collection ‘Rogers’;{According to Van Regteren Altena 1964.} …; collection Johann August Gottlieb Weigel (1773-1846), Leipzig;{According to the catalogue for the 1895 Pitcairn Knowles sale.} his sale, Stuttgart (Gutekunst), 15 May 1883 sqq., no. 549 (‘Pieter van Laer. Bergige Landschaft. Im Vordergrunde lagende Jäger und Hunde. Schwarze Kreide und Tusche auf blauem Papier, weiß gehöht. Bezeichnet. Auf der Rückseite eine Felsenstudie mit Wasserfall. Bezeichnet: Jan Asselyn. L. 41, H. 27 cm’), fl. 25, to ‘HG’ [Heinrich Georg Gutekunst];{Copy RMA.} …; collection William Pitcairn Knowles (1820-94), Rotterdam and Wiesbaden (L. 2643); his sale, Amsterdam (F. Muller), 25 June 1895 sqq., no. 379 (‘Pieter van Laer dit Bamboche, Halte de chasseurs. Très-beau croquis. Au verso, un dessin de Jan Asselyn. Collections Boyers et Weigel. Pierre noire et encre de Chine, sur papier bleu. H. 26, l. 41 cent.’), fl. 5, to the dealer F. Muller for the Vereniging Rembrandt;{Copy RMA; note RMA.} from whom, fl. 6, to the museum (L. 2228), 1899
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Jan Asselijn
Resting Huntsmen in an Italianate Landscape / verso: Two Travellers in a Subterranean Grotto
c. 1636 - c. 1646
Inscriptions
inscribed: lower left, in an eighteenth-century hand, in brown ink, Bamboots.; lower right, in pencil, illegible
inscribed on verso: upper right, in a seventeenth-century hand (possibly by Willem Schellinks), in brown ink (partially masked), Jan Asselijn.; lower left, in black chalk, L
Technical notes
Watermark: None
Provenance
…; ? collection Abraham van Broyel (?-1759 or before), Amsterdam;1According to the catalogue for the sale, William Pitcairn Knowles, Amsterdam (F. Muller), 25 June 1895 sqq., no. 379. his sale, Amsterdam (H. de Leth), 30 October 1759 sqq., no. 678, as Pieter van Laer (‘Een Italiaansche Pleisteir-plaats by een Ruine, zeer fraai op blaauw Papier met zwart kryt en Oost-Indische Ink ten wit gehoogd, hoog 11, breed 16 duim. [275 x 406 mm]’), fl. 18:15:- to Johann Edler Goll von Franckenstein (1722-85), Amsterdam and Velzen;2Copy RKD. …; ? collection ‘Rogers’;3According to Van Regteren Altena 1964. …; collection Johann August Gottlieb Weigel (1773-1846), Leipzig;4According to the catalogue for the 1895 Pitcairn Knowles sale. his sale, Stuttgart (Gutekunst), 15 May 1883 sqq., no. 549 (‘Pieter van Laer. Bergige Landschaft. Im Vordergrunde lagende Jäger und Hunde. Schwarze Kreide und Tusche auf blauem Papier, weiß gehöht. Bezeichnet. Auf der Rückseite eine Felsenstudie mit Wasserfall. Bezeichnet: Jan Asselyn. L. 41, H. 27 cm’), fl. 25, to ‘HG’ [Heinrich Georg Gutekunst];5Copy RMA. …; collection William Pitcairn Knowles (1820-94), Rotterdam and Wiesbaden (L. 2643); his sale, Amsterdam (F. Muller), 25 June 1895 sqq., no. 379 (‘Pieter van Laer dit Bamboche, Halte de chasseurs. Très-beau croquis. Au verso, un dessin de Jan Asselyn. Collections Boyers et Weigel. Pierre noire et encre de Chine, sur papier bleu. H. 26, l. 41 cent.’), fl. 5, to the dealer F. Muller for the Vereniging Rembrandt;6Copy RMA; note RMA. from whom, fl. 6, to the museum (L. 2228), 1899
Object number: RP-T-1899-A-4285(R)
Credit line: Acquired with the support of the Vereniging Rembrandt
The artist
Biography
Jan Asselijn (Dieppe c. 1614 - Amsterdam 1652)
In 1631 the Huguenot Abraham Asselin (1609-1697), a maker of gold wire, stated that he had been living in Amsterdam for ten years and that his parents were dead. He had three brothers living in the city: the painter Jan, the poet Thomas Asselin (c. 1620-1701) and Steven Asselin (?-?). They were from Dieppe in Normandy and were members of the local Walloon Congregation. Jan’s date of birth is not known, but it must have been around or just before 1614, because his earliest painting is from 1634 and he would not have signed as an independent master before he was twenty.
Nothing is known for certain about his training, but possible teachers were Esaias van de Velde (1587-1630) and Van de Velde’s nephew Jan Martszen II (c. 1609-after 1647), who was living in Amsterdam in 1633. Asselijn followed their example by specializing in cavalry battles, many of them illustrating episodes from the Thirty Years’ War. There are at least five dated works from 1634 and 1635 representing Gustav Adolf at the Battle of Lützen, 16 November 1632, including one from 1634 in the Herzog Anton-Ulrich Museum, Braunschweig (inv. no. GG 348),7A.C. Steland-Stief, Jan Asselijn (nach 1610-1652), Amsterdam 1971, no. 7. one from 1635 in the Gemäldegalerie, Berlin (inv. no. 1581),8Ibid., no. 8. and another from 1635 that appeared on the Cologne art market in 2016.9Sale, Cologne (Lempertz), 19 May 2016 sqq., no. 1261. Asselijn was still documented in Amsterdam at the end of 1635, but he must have left for Rome shortly afterwards, where he joined the Bentvueghels artists’ society and was nicknamed Crabbetje (‘Little Crab’) because of his deformed hand. According to Baldinucci, he also spent some time in Florence, where he befriended the French artist Jacques Courtois (1621-1676). He was probably in Venice as well, where there were several of his works, according to Von Sandrart.
While in Rome, Asselijn came under the influence of Pieter van Laer (1599-1642), who returned to the Netherlands in 1639, and possibly also that of the brothers Andries Both (1611/12-1642) and Jan Both (1618/22-1652), who lived there until 1641. It is not known when Asselijn returned home, but on the way he certainly paused for a while in Lyon, where he married Antoinette Houwaart [Huaart] (?-after 1652), an Antwerp merchant’s daughter, around 1644-45. Houwaart’s older sister married the Nijmegen painter Nicolaes van Helt Stockade (1614-1699) at around the same time. In 1645 both painters and their wives travelled to Paris, where Asselijn, Herman van Swanevelt (1603/04-1655) and others painted several landscapes for the hôtel particulier of the financier Nicolas Lambert (?-1648) on the Île Saint-Louis, including Asselijn’s three canvases now preserved in the Musée du Louvre, Paris (inv. nos. 984, 985 and 986).10A.C. Steland-Stief, Jan Asselijn (nach 1610-1652), Amsterdam 1971, nos. 217, 125 and 44. While he was in Paris, Asselijn also made designs for three print suites etched and marketed by Gabriel Perelle (1604-1677), based on first-hand sketches made in Italy.11For the final preparatory drawings, see A.C. Steland, Die Zeichnungen des Jan Asselijn, Fridingen 1989, pp. 29-47; for the etchings by Perelle, see Hollstein, I (1947), nos. 15-32. The Paris interlude did not last long, for in August 1646 Willem Schellinks (1623-1678) and Lambert Doomer (1624-1700) looked for Asselijn and Van Helt Stockade there, only to discover that they and their families already had left for home. The two couples travelled by way of Antwerp, where Van Helt Stockade is documented in the autumn of 1646. Asselijn is first recorded back in Amsterdam on 14 April 1647. From 1650, he adopted a Dutch spelling of his surname, and he became a citizen of the city in 1652. He made his will on 28 September that year and was buried in the Nieuwezijds Kapel five days later.
Although there are drawings by Asselijn on paper with Italian watermarks, presumed to have been executed by him in Italy, there are very few dated paintings from his period in Italy and France (1636-46). He produced little apart from Italianate landscapes after his return, the only exceptions being a couple of animal pieces and a few history scenes, such as the breach of the St Anthony’s Dike near Diemen in March 1651, one depiction of which is in the Rijksmuseum (inv. no. SK-A-5030),12A.C. Steland-Stief, Jan Asselijn (nach 1610-1652), Amsterdam 1971, no. 227. and the dike’s rebuilding in 1652, as seen in a painting in the Gemäldegalerie, Berlin (inv. no. 58.2).13Ibid., no. 231. In 1647-49 he collaborated at least once with Jan-Baptist Weenix (1621-1659), with whom he jointly signed the Seaport with a High Tower in the Akademie der bildenden Künste, Vienna (inv. no. 761).14A.A. van Wagenberg-Ter Hoeven, Jan Weenix: The Paintings: Master of the Dutch Hunting Still Life, Zwolle 2018, no. 150 (fig. 298). In 1647-48 Rembrandt (1606-1669) etched Asselijn’s portrait as a gentleman posing at his easel (e.g. inv. no. RP-P-OB-553). Asselijn’s last known works are from 1652: the abovementioned Repair of the St Anthony’s Dike in Berlin; Italianate Landscape with a Horse Drinking from a Spring, whose present whereabouts are unknown;15A.C. Steland-Stief, Jan Asselijn (nach 1610-1652), Amsterdam 1971, no. 48. and View of Rome with the Ponte Rotte, whose date was discovered when it appeared on the New York art market in 2010.16Ibid., no. 179; sale, New York (Sotheby’s), 28 January 2010, no. 159. Houbraken says that Frederic de Moucheron I (1633-1686) was apprenticed to Asselijn. No other pupils are known, but he certainly had a great influence, among others, on Nicolaes Berchem (1621/22-1683), as well as on Schellinks, who may have secured drawings and other works from his studio estate.
E. de Groot, 2011
References
J. von Sandrart, Joachim von Sandrarts Academie der Bau-, Bild- und Mahlerey-Ku¨nste von 1675: Leben der beru¨hmten Maler, Bildhauer und Baumeister, Nuremburg 1675; ed. and commentary by A.R. Peltzer, Munich 1925, pp. 182, 258-60; F. Baldinucci, Notizie dei professori del disegno da Cimabue in qua, 6 vols., Florence 1681-1728; facs. edn. of I-V ed. by F. Ranalli, Florence 1845-47 (reprinted 1974), VI-VII ed. by P. Barocchi, Florence 1975, IV (1686/ed. 1974), p. 331, V (1728/ed. 1974), p. 205; A. Houbraken, De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen, 3 vols., Amsterdam 1718-21, II (1719), p. 327, III (1721), pp. 64-65; P. Scheltema, Rembrand: Redevoering over het leven en de verdiensten van Rembrand van Rijn, met eene menigte geschiedkundige bijlagen meerendeels uit echter bronnen geput, Amsterdam 1853, p. 69; A. Bredius, ‘Het schildersregister van Jan Sysmus, stads-doctor van Amsterdam’, Oud Holland 8 (1890), pp. 231-32; H. Gerson, Ausbreitung und Nachwirkung der holländischen Malerei des 17. Jahrhunderts, Amsterdam 1942, pp. 50-51; A. Blankert, Nederlandse 17e eeuwse Italianiserende landschapschilders, exh. cat. Utrecht (Centraal Museum) 1965 (rev. edn. as Nederlandse 17e eeuwse Italianiserende landschapschilders/Dutch 17th-century Italianate Landscape Painters, Soest 1978), pp. 129-31; M.J.E. Spits-Sanders, ‘Abraham Asselijn’, Maandblad Amstelodamum 63 (1976), pp. 109-11; A.C. Steland-Stief, Jan Asselijn (nach 1610-1652), Amsterdam 1971 (documents); A.C. Steland-Stief, Die Zeichnungen des Jan Asselijn, Fridingen, 1989; A.C. Steland-Stief, ‘Jan Asselijn’, in D.A. Levine and E. Mai et al., I Bamboccianti: Niederländische Malerrebellen im Rom des Barock, exh. cat. Cologne (Wallraf-Richartz-Museum)/Utrecht (Centraal Museum) 1991-92, p. 114; A.C. Steland-Stief, ‘Jan Asselijn’, in A. Beyer et al. (eds.), Allgemeines Künstlerlexikon: Die bildenden Künstler aller Zeiten und Völker, Munich 1992-, V (1992), pp. 458-59; A.C. Steland, ‘Jan Asselijn,’ in J. Turner (ed.), The Dictionary of Art, London/New York 1996, II, pp. 614-15 (2003 Grove online edn. at https://doi.org/10.1093/gao/9781884446054.article.T004627); J. Briels, Peintres flamands au berceau du sie`cle d’or hollandaise, 1585-1630, avec biographies en annexe, Antwerp 1997, p. 294
Entry
In 1980 and again in 1989, Steland catalogued a large number of chalk sketches on blue paper under the name of Jan Asselijn. Although this group is by no means stylistically coherent,17P. Schatborn, with J. Verberne, Drawn to Warmth: 17th-century Dutch Artists in Italy, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Rijksmuseum) 2001, pp. 108-09, 174. a nucleus of drawings is certainly autograph, among them the present drawing and inv. no. RP-T-1898-A-3519. Both bear the name of the artist written in a calligraphic seventeenth-century hand on the verso, in all likelihood that of fellow artist Willem Schellinks (1627-1678). A similar inscription is found on three stylistically related drawings attributed to Asselijn in the Hamburger Kunsthalle, Hamburg (inv. nos. 21642, 21641 and 21643).18A.C. Steland, Die Zeichnungen des Jan Asselijn, Fridingen 1989, nos. 84, 85 and 83; A. Stefes, Niederländische Zeichnungen, 1450-1800, 3 vols., coll. cat. Hamburg 2011 (Die Sammlungen der Hamburger Kunsthalle, Kupferstichkabinett, vol. 2), nos. 21-23. It was Steland herself (A.C. Steland-Stief, ‘Zum zeichnerischen Werk des Jan Asselijn: Neue Funde und Forschungsperspektiven’, Oud Holland 94 (1980), pp. 213-58 (esp. p. 241)) who first suggested the name of Schellinks as the author of such inscriptions, found on a wide stylistic range of drawings by the artist. Schellinks also apparently wrote Asselijn’s name on the unquestionably autograph drawing of Pilgrims Receiving Alms, in the Special Collections, Universiteit Leiden (inv. no. PK-T-AW-1081),19A.C. Steland, Die Zeichnungen des Jan Asselijn, Fridingen 1989, no. 97. which Schellinks used as a study for a painting in the Statens Museum for Kunst, Copenhagen (inv. no. KMSst172).20Ibid., fig. 104. Given the degree of Asselijn’s influence on Schellinks (cf. inv. no. RP-T-1890-A-2294), it is likely that Asselijn’s drawings ended up in Schellinks’s possession, or at least passed through his hands. These inscriptions should thus be considered trustworthy.21Alternative explanations, such as the drawings being copies by Schellinks after Asselijn, with the inscription alluding to the inventor, are to be excluded on stylistic grounds.
The fluid brushwork of the verso sketch, representing a subterranean grotto with two men looking at a waterfall, long accepted as by Asselijn,22A.C. Steland, Die Zeichnungen des Jan Asselijn, Fridingen 1989, p. 92. is reminiscent of the contrasting handling of light and the staffage in the most secure drawings in Asselijn’s drawn oeuvre, namely the Italian views etched by Gabriel Perelle (1604-1677) – such as the Ruins of the Nympheum Acqua Julia, also in the Hamburger Kunsthalle (inv. no. 1963-115),23Ibid., no. 79; A. Stefes, Niederländische Zeichnungen, 1450-1800, 3 vols., coll. cat. Hamburg 2011 (Die Sammlungen der Hamburger Kunsthalle, Kupferstichkabinett, vol. 2), no. 20. or the Waterfall at Tivoli with the Temple of the Tiburtine Sibyl (Temple of Vesta) in the Istituto Nazionale per la Grafica, Gabinetto Nazionale delle Stampe, Rome (inv. no. FN 503).24A.C. Steland, Die Zeichnungen des Jan Asselijn, Fridingen 1989, no. 136; J.C.N. Bruintjes and N. Köhler, Da Van Heemskerck a Van Wittel: Disegni fiamminghi e olandesi del XVI-XVII secolo dalle collezioni del Gabinetto dei Disegni e delle Stampe, exh. cat. ’s-Hertogenbosch (Noordbrabants Museum)/Rome (Gabinetto Nazionale delle Stampe) 1992-93, no. 51. The recto, on the other hand, with hunters resting and a falconer approaching on horseback, was associated with Pieter van Laer (1599-after 1641) in an eighteenth-century inscription (Bamboots). In nineteenth-century auctions, this even lead to the assumption that the two sides were executed by different hands, a charming idea in view of Von Sandrart’s report of Van Laer’s influence on Asselijn after the latter’s arrival in Rome.25J. von Sandrart, Teutsche Academie der Bau-, Bild- und Mahlerey-Künste, Nuremberg 1675, p. 182: ‘(...) nach Rom allda er sich des Kunst-reichen von Laar sonsten Bomboots schöner Manier sehr beflisse’ (‘(...) Rome, where he applied himself in the fine manner of the artistic Van Laer’.) However, both the subject-matter and the style are so close to similarly inscribed drawings in Hamburg that there is no reason to doubt Asselijn’s hand for both sides. As Steland pointed out,26A.C. Steland, Die Zeichnungen des Jan Asselijn, Fridingen 1989, p. 92. the angled contours of the figures can be seen in Asselijn’s signed and dated painting of a Cavalry Attack at Sunset of 1646, also in the Rijksmuseum (inv. no. SK-A-5), which features similarly formed rocks in the background. Another drawing formerly classified as Pieter van Laer, now recognized as an early work by Asselijn, is the Resting Hunters in the Musées Royaux des Beaux-Arts de Belgique, Brussels (inv. no. 4060/2104),27Ibid., no. 41. which is related in subject-matter and includes an almost identical horse.
There are no known paintings related to the sketches on either the recto or the verso, and both should probably be considered quick ‘prime idee’.
Annemarie Stefes, 2018
Literature
G.J. Hoogewerff, ‘Pieter van Laer en zijn vrienden III’, Oud Holland 50 (1933), pp. 113-15 (fig. 30, as Van Laer); G.J. Hoogewerff, De Bentvueghels, The Hague 1952 (fig. 28, as Van Laer); C. von Heusinger, Handzeichnungen I: Die Niederländer des 16. bis 18. Jahrhunderts, coll. cat. Hannover 1960 (Bildkataloge des Kestner-Museums Hannover, vol. 3), p. 44 (as Van Laer); J.Q. van Regteren Altena, Vereeuwigde Stad: Rome door Nederlanders getekend, 1500-1900, Amsterdam 1964, no. 4 (fig. 37); L.C.J. Frerichs, Berchem en de Bentgenoten in Italië, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Rijksprentenkabinet) 1970, no. 36; A.C. Steland-Stief, ‘Zum zeichnerischen Werk des Jan Asselijn: Neue Funde und Forschungsperspektiven’, Oud Holland 94 (1980), pp. 236, 248-49, 252, 254 (figs. 33, 51); A.C. Steland, Die Zeichnungen des Jan Asselijn, Fridingen 1989, pp. 92-95, 209, no. 7 (figs. 97, 98); A. Stefes, Niederländische Zeichnungen, 1450-1800, 3 vols., coll. cat. Hamburg 2011 (Die Sammlungen der Hamburger Kunsthalle, Kupferstichkabinett, vol. 2), I, p. 75, under no. 21 (n. 2)
Citation
A. Stefes, 2018, 'Jan Asselijn, Resting Huntsmen in an Italianate Landscape / verso: Two Travellers in a Subterranean Grotto, c. 1636 - c. 1646', in J. Turner (ed.), Dutch Drawings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: https://data.rijksmuseum.nl/200117124
(accessed 6 December 2025 11:04:26).Footnotes
- 1According to the catalogue for the sale, William Pitcairn Knowles, Amsterdam (F. Muller), 25 June 1895 sqq., no. 379.
- 2Copy RKD.
- 3According to Van Regteren Altena 1964.
- 4According to the catalogue for the 1895 Pitcairn Knowles sale.
- 5Copy RMA.
- 6Copy RMA; note RMA.
- 7A.C. Steland-Stief, Jan Asselijn (nach 1610-1652), Amsterdam 1971, no. 7.
- 8Ibid., no. 8.
- 9Sale, Cologne (Lempertz), 19 May 2016 sqq., no. 1261.
- 10A.C. Steland-Stief, Jan Asselijn (nach 1610-1652), Amsterdam 1971, nos. 217, 125 and 44.
- 11For the final preparatory drawings, see A.C. Steland, Die Zeichnungen des Jan Asselijn, Fridingen 1989, pp. 29-47; for the etchings by Perelle, see Hollstein, I (1947), nos. 15-32.
- 12A.C. Steland-Stief, Jan Asselijn (nach 1610-1652), Amsterdam 1971, no. 227.
- 13Ibid., no. 231.
- 14A.A. van Wagenberg-Ter Hoeven, Jan Weenix: The Paintings: Master of the Dutch Hunting Still Life, Zwolle 2018, no. 150 (fig. 298).
- 15A.C. Steland-Stief, Jan Asselijn (nach 1610-1652), Amsterdam 1971, no. 48.
- 16Ibid., no. 179; sale, New York (Sotheby’s), 28 January 2010, no. 159.
- 17P. Schatborn, with J. Verberne, Drawn to Warmth: 17th-century Dutch Artists in Italy, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Rijksmuseum) 2001, pp. 108-09, 174.
- 18A.C. Steland, Die Zeichnungen des Jan Asselijn, Fridingen 1989, nos. 84, 85 and 83; A. Stefes, Niederländische Zeichnungen, 1450-1800, 3 vols., coll. cat. Hamburg 2011 (Die Sammlungen der Hamburger Kunsthalle, Kupferstichkabinett, vol. 2), nos. 21-23. It was Steland herself (A.C. Steland-Stief, ‘Zum zeichnerischen Werk des Jan Asselijn: Neue Funde und Forschungsperspektiven’, Oud Holland 94 (1980), pp. 213-58 (esp. p. 241)) who first suggested the name of Schellinks as the author of such inscriptions, found on a wide stylistic range of drawings by the artist.
- 19A.C. Steland, Die Zeichnungen des Jan Asselijn, Fridingen 1989, no. 97.
- 20Ibid., fig. 104.
- 21Alternative explanations, such as the drawings being copies by Schellinks after Asselijn, with the inscription alluding to the inventor, are to be excluded on stylistic grounds.
- 22A.C. Steland, Die Zeichnungen des Jan Asselijn, Fridingen 1989, p. 92.
- 23Ibid., no. 79; A. Stefes, Niederländische Zeichnungen, 1450-1800, 3 vols., coll. cat. Hamburg 2011 (Die Sammlungen der Hamburger Kunsthalle, Kupferstichkabinett, vol. 2), no. 20.
- 24A.C. Steland, Die Zeichnungen des Jan Asselijn, Fridingen 1989, no. 136; J.C.N. Bruintjes and N. Köhler, Da Van Heemskerck a Van Wittel: Disegni fiamminghi e olandesi del XVI-XVII secolo dalle collezioni del Gabinetto dei Disegni e delle Stampe, exh. cat. ’s-Hertogenbosch (Noordbrabants Museum)/Rome (Gabinetto Nazionale delle Stampe) 1992-93, no. 51.
- 25J. von Sandrart, Teutsche Academie der Bau-, Bild- und Mahlerey-Künste, Nuremberg 1675, p. 182: ‘(...) nach Rom allda er sich des Kunst-reichen von Laar sonsten Bomboots schöner Manier sehr beflisse’ (‘(...) Rome, where he applied himself in the fine manner of the artistic Van Laer’.)
- 26A.C. Steland, Die Zeichnungen des Jan Asselijn, Fridingen 1989, p. 92.
- 27Ibid., no. 41.











