Jan Lievens: Out of Rembrandt's Shadow
A new exhibition re-establishes Lievens' reputation as an old master, after centuries of being eclipsed by his friend and rival
- By Matthew Gurewitsch
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2009, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
Around 1632, Rembrandt relocated to Amsterdam for good, while Lievens struck out for London, hoping for work at the court of King Charles I. He apparently did several portraits, now lost, of the royal family, including one of the king. About three years later, he left London for Antwerp, where he found a congenial artistic community, busied himself making prints and drawings, taught himself to do woodcuts and undertook various commissions for Jesuit churches. In Antwerp he married Susanna Colijns de Nole, a Catholic and the daughter of a noted sculptor who had worked with the Jesuits. Lievens may have converted to her religion at that time, less for reasons of faith than as a career move. The couple had a son, Jan Andrea, who grew up to be a painter and, on at least one occasion, his father's collaborator.
In 1644 Lievens moved on again, showing up over the next years in Amsterdam, The Hague and Leiden, as opportunities arose. At last, his lifelong dream of a career creating large-scale extravaganzas for princely dwellings was coming true. Widowed shortly after his return to the Netherlands, Lievens married Cornelia de Bray, the daughter of an Amsterdam notary, in 1648.
After Lievens' departure for England, the bold style of his early work had largely fallen from favor with Dutch government officials and the fashionable clientele at court. They now preferred the more polished Italianate manner practiced by Van Dyck and Peter Paul Rubens, painter to the most illustrious crowned heads of Europe. Rembrandt continued to hone his darkling style, which may have cost him business. But the pragmatic Lievens did his best to move with the times, adapting his style to satisfy many patrons.
Coincidentally, both Rembrandt and Lievens wound up living along an Amsterdam canal called the Rozengracht during their final years. Rembrandt by this time was reduced effectively to working for room and board—his common-law wife and Titus, his only surviving son, had taken control of his finances. Lievens ended up in sad straits, too. Though demand for his work remained strong, financial mismanagement had left him deep in debt.
As an artist, Lievens never stopped assimilating new influences, which made his own style less distinctive as time went on. But even if he made his mark most memorably as the brash Young Turk of his Leiden days, he never lost his capacity to surprise. In the current show, two scenes of lowlife from his Antwerp period (A Greedy Couple Surprised by Death and Fighting Cardplayers and Death) explode with verve and violence. In a different vein, Gideon's Sacrifice shows an angel gently touching the tip of his wand to an altar to ignite a sacrificial flame. Long lost, the painting resurfaced on the art market in Rome in 1995, attributed to a lesser artist of the Italian Renaissance. Now it is given to Lievens as a work of the early 1650s—an ingenious combination of elements from various periods of his career. No longer invisible, Rembrandt's companion star is shining with a luster all its own.
Matthew Gurewitsch's articles on culture and the arts appear frequently in the New York Times and Smithsonian.
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (20)
Lievens is perhaps the finest artist; his paintings are like live photographs.
Homeless Spartacus
Posted by James More on March 3,2010 | 04:40 PM
I found this issue of the Smithsonian Magazine in my doctor's waiting room. I am in the process of developing my lesson plans for a literature study on the book of Esther that I teaching in a home school co-op class on Monday. Since I like to incorporate fine art, I had already posted what I was thought was the same Esther painting for my students on-line. When I got home, it turned out it was "The Banquet of Esther and Asahueras" painted by Jan Victors in 1670 -- but I was stunned by the similarity between the two! Take a look here: http://www.wga.hu/art/v/victors/esther_a.jpg
I did still have a Rembrandt in the group of my chosen paintings -- "Haman Begging Esther for Mercy."
This "divine coincidence" of finding the article fascinates me, especially since in the same issue, there is a story about Hiram Bingham IV signing the visa for artist Marc Chagall to leave Nazi Europe. One of the other paintings I had chosen for my Esther study was a Chagall, and the story of Jews during the Holocaust is so pertinent to our topic as well.
Great articles -- superb timing for me!
Blessings,
Virginia Knowles
http://providencehomeeducators.blogspot.com/2009/09/paintings-about-story-of-esther.html
Posted by Virginia Knowles on September 10,2009 | 02:55 PM
Mr. Gurewitsch's article on Jan Lievens is truly outstanding. Not only does he educate his audience, but he goes a step further by enlightening us--showing us what to look for and how to look. The essay is an excellent inventive variation on the compare and contrast format. As a college freshman composition teacher I will share this with students as a model of how interesting and engaging such an essay can be. Thank you for your eloquent piece.
Posted by judith rosenberg on July 10,2009 | 03:38 PM
Does the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam issue prints of this artist? In particular, "Still life with books", or perhaps is there something available in the US from the time when they thought it was a Rembrandt. Thanks, Kay Connell
Posted by Kay Connell on May 10,2009 | 04:47 PM
It is really great to know about this Dutch painter. I would love to see more of his paintings.
Posted by Kausik Chattopadhyay on May 2,2009 | 11:06 PM
The reproduction of "The raising of Lazarus" in your article about the Dutch painter Jan Lievens (March 2009) is shown as seen in a mirror with respect to the reproduction of the same work in a site showing his paintings in the Rijksmuseum Amsterdam.
Posted by Italo J. Dejter on March 28,2009 | 05:18 PM
It's a pity that the Lievens exhibit did not travel more widely in the U.S.A. We on the West Coast and the fine museums of San Francisco would have loved to have seen it. At least many thanks for the article.
Posted by Gordon L, Deegan on March 28,2009 | 05:01 PM
Do you know the name of what I presume to be a young man in the turban? He looks so much like my 12-year-old granddaughter that it is difficult for me to comprehend that the painting is 400 years old and not of her.
Posted by Sherry Smith on March 23,2009 | 10:53 PM
I would dearly love to travel to Milwaukee and enjoy this exhibit. I find these articles about artists in the Smithsonian so fascinating.
Posted by Lewis Field on March 17,2009 | 03:28 AM
Your article has more paintings featured than your web site. If you do have more paintings please make it more obveous how to view them.
Posted by A. J. Albert on March 16,2009 | 07:59 PM
I have been trying to see more images of Lievens' work, but al I seem to be able to get is the same article (above). How do I view more pictures?
Posted by Roberta Mitchell on March 16,2009 | 11:27 AM
"Gideon's Sacrifice shows an angel..." from the article's last paragraph. Shouldn't that be Abraham's Sacrifice ?
Posted by pbg on March 14,2009 | 12:03 PM
The image of "The Raising of Lazarus" was reversed in the original online gallery. It has been updated with the correct version of the image. Thanks for catching the error.
Posted by Maura McCarthy, Web Editor on March 6,2009 | 02:32 PM
I have fallen in love with the painting by Jan Lievens titled "Young Man in Yellow". Can you supply a source where we might purchase a copy for our home? The article was enlightening, as are most Smithsonian Magazine pieces.We encourage our grandchildren to browse through the monthly publication. I am a native of D.C. and know the value of our Nation's Museum. Posted March 6, 2009, Hilton Head Island, SC
Posted by Catherine R. Cherrix on March 6,2009 | 11:21 AM
So sorry to have missed this incredible exhibit when it was in Washington. Lievens truely belongs along side the great painters of the world. Thanks for running this article.
Posted by Janette Bell on March 4,2009 | 01:07 PM
It's NOT at all surprising that there are those artists who assisted recognized masters for years yet whose names never made it to the light of day....until NOW! Who assisted Rafael,Michelangelo,Da Vinci,and who knows who else? Curiously,also some artists who were never even seen because their works were confiscated or destroyed ny tyrannical rulers and despots-including the Capetian dynasty,in France.
Posted by Charles J.Murnick on March 2,2009 | 05:59 PM
Obscure indeed! So much so that the Smithsonian Magazine didn't honor Lievens with an article on the exhibition until after it left Washington. I can't remember the last time they've done that...if at all. Nevertheless, as the previous commentator indicated, a trip to Milwaukee is in the offing. It may be the last time in a long time that this painter's gorgeous oeuvre will be available to the American public.
Posted by Robert Walker on March 1,2009 | 02:05 PM
thank you very much - a trip to Milwaukee lies ahead!! Seen together I'm sure the impact of his work will be tremendous.
Posted by lois hughes on February 26,2009 | 06:26 AM
Most excellent.
Posted by len sellers on February 25,2009 | 12:55 PM
I am just curious as the image of The Raising of Lazarus in the magazine version is the mirror image of what is shown on the website. Which is correct?
Posted by Steven Schroyer on February 24,2009 | 10:40 PM
I followed the link in the printed Smithsonian Magazine (March 2009) to the on-line gallery of paintings by Jan Lievens. The painting "The Raising of Lazarus" is shown in both the magazine and the gallery, but the painting is flipped left-to-right in one of them. Which version is the correct orientation? [I'd appreciate a response -- Thanks!]
Posted by Margery L Goldstein on February 24,2009 | 06:09 PM