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Schelte a Bolswert

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Portrait of Schelte Adamsz. Bolswert, by Adriaen Lommelin after Anthony van Dyck, engraved between 1632 and 1641.

Schelte a Bolswert or Schelte Adamsz. Bolswert (c. 1586 – 1659) was a Frisian engraver who worked most of his career in Antwerp where he was one of the lead engravers in Rubens' workshop. He is known for his reproductive works after Rubens and Anthony van Dyck.[1]

Life

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He was born in the town of Bolswert in Friesland around 1586 as the son of Adam Uytema. Both he and his older brother, Boetius à Bolswert left in 1609 their hometown for Amsterdam where the older brother worked as an engraver for the print publisher Michiel Colyn. The younger brother studied printmaking with his brother and produced his first known work in 1612. By 1617 the brothers were active in Antwerp as employees of the Plantin Press.[1]

Boetius was admitted as a freemaster in the Antwerp Guild of Saint Luke in 1621. He and Adam received a permit (a so-called 'privilege') to engrave, print and sell engravings in Antwerp. Adam became freemaster in the Antwerp Guild of Saint Luke in the guild year 1625-1626. He never acquired Antwerp poorterschap (citizenship). Schelte lived in with the Lauwers family of printers on the Lombardenvest.[1]

For the last five years of his life Boetius worked exclusively on engravings after Rubens. Following his death in 1633, Schelte was employed by Rubens in his place.[2] He worked closely with the painter, who sometimes retouched his proofs.[3] He continued to engrave his works after Rubens' death in 1640.[2]

He died in Antwerp and was buried on 22 December 1659 in the choir of Antwerp Cathedral.[1]

Work

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Bolswert's plates were worked entirely with the graver, and he does not seem to have made any use of the drypoint.[3] Basan said of his work:

The freedom which this excellent artist handled the graver, the picturesque roughness of etching, which he could imitate without any other assisting instrument, and the ability he possessed of distinguishing the different masses of colours, have always been admired by the conoisseurs".[4]

Joseph Strutt, after quoting this passage, adds that Bolswert "drew excellently, and without any manner of his own; for his prints are the exact transcripts of the pictures he engraved from".[4] His plates are generally signed with his name.[3]

Principal prints

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Various subjects, mostly after his own designs

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  • The Infant Jesus and St. John playing with a Lamb.
  • The Virgin Mary, and Infant Jesus sleeping.
  • The Virgin giving suck to the Infant.
  • The Virgin Mary, with her hands folded on her Breast.
  • The Virgin Mary with the Infant in the clouds, with Angels and Cherubim.
  • The Infant Jesus caressing the Virgin Mary, and St. Joseph holding a Pear.
  • Twelve half-length figures of Saints.
Elegant company in an interior, after painting by Christoffel Jacobsz van der Laemen in the National Portrait Gallery.

Various subjects, after different Flemish masters

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The duet. The painter Theodoor Rombouts and his wife Anna van Thielen after Theodoor Rombouts

Portraits, etc., after Van Dyck

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Portrait of Jan Baptist Barbé, after Anthony van Dyck, ca. 1636-1641.
  • Margaret of Lorraine, Duchess of Orleans.
  • Willem de Vos, painter. (pictured)
  • Sebastiaen Vrancx, painter.
  • Maria mater Dei.
  • The Holy Family, with an Angel holding a Crown.
  • The Virgin and the Infant Christ on her Knoe, with a Female Saint holding a Palm.
  • The Holy Family, with the Infant sleeping in the Arms of the Virgin.
  • The Holy Family in a landscape, with several Angels.
  • Christ crowned with Thorns; very fine.
  • The Elevation of the Cross.
  • The Crucifixion, a grand composition, with two Men on horseback, and a figure presenting the Sponge to Christ. On the other side, the Virgin Mary and St. John standing, and Mary Magdalene kneeling and embracing the Cross. This is considered one of the most beautiful engravings by Bolswert. In the first impressions, which are very scarce, the hand of St. John is not seen on the shoulder of the Virgin: in the second impressions, the hand of St. John rests on the Virgin's shoulder, and the name of Van Dyck is changed from the left to the right hand comer of the plate. In the last impressions the hand was erased, probably to give them the appearance of first impressions, but the trick is easily discovered by the superiority of the first in point of clearness and colour.

Subjects after Rubens

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  • The Brazen Serpent; the best impressions are those which have the word Antwerpiae at the right hand corner, without the name of G. Hendrix.
  • The Marriage of the Virgin; the best impressions have the name of Hendrix, without the word Antwerpiae.
  • The Annunciation; the best impressions are those with the address of Martinus van den Enden the Elder.
  • The Nativity; the best impressions have the same address.
  • The Adoration of the Magi; the same.
  • The Return of the Holy Family from Egypt: the same.
  • The Feast of Herod, with Herodias presenting the Head of St. John to her Mother.
  • The Executioner giving the Head of St. John to Herodias.
  • The miraculous Draught of Fishes; in three plates.
  • Christ crucified between the Thieves; G. Hendrix exc.
  • The Crucifixion, a Soldier on horseback piercing the side of Our Saviour; dated 1631; extremely fine.
  • The Crucifixion, with the city of Jerusalem in the distance; M. van den Enden exc.
  • The Dead Christ in the Lap of the Virgin Mary, with. St. Francis; the same subject is engraved by Pontius.
  • The Resurrection; M. van den Enden excudit.
  • The Ascension; the same.
  • The Four Evangelists.
  • The Fathers of the Church; Nic. Lauwers exc.
  • The Destruction of Idolatry; in two sheets; the same.
  • The Triumph of the Church; in two sheets; the same.
  • The Immaculate Conception; Ant. Bon. Enfant exc.
  • The Assumption; arched; M. van den Enden exc.
  • The Assumption, with one of the Disciples lifting the Stone of the Sepulchre; M. van den Enden; the impressions with the address of G. Hendrix are posterior, and those with the name of C. van Merlen are retouched.
  • The Infant Jesus embracing the Virgin Mary; M. van den Enden exc.
  • The Virgin Mary holding a Globe, and the Infant Jesus holding a Sceptre.
  • The Holy Family, vrith the Infant Jesus and St. John caressing a Lamb.
  • The Holy Family, with a Parrot on a Pillar; A. Bonenfant exc.
  • St. Ignatius and St. Francis Xavier; the first impressions are before the name of Rubens.
  • The Education of the Virgin by St. Anne; the best impressions are without the name of Hendrix.
  • St. Cecilia; very fine.
  • St. Theresa at the Feet of Christ, interceding for the Souls in Purgatory; M. van den Enden exc.
  • The Continence of Scipio; the best impressions are before the address of G. Hendrix.
  • Silenus, drunk, supported by a Satyr, with another figure; the best impressions are those with the name of Bolswert only, without the address.
  • A Peasant Dance,[5] Gillis Hendricx excudit.
Shipwreck of St Paul after Rubens.

Landscapes and hunting scenes

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d Schelte Adamsz. Bolswert at the Netherlands Institute for Art History
  2. ^ a b Rubens and his Engravers. London: P.D. Colnaghi and Sons. 1977.
  3. ^ a b c Bryan 1886
  4. ^ a b Strutt, Joseph (1786). "Sheltius a Bolswert or Bolsuerd". A Biographical Dictionary Containing All the Engravers, From the Earliest Period of the Art of Engraving to the Present Day. London: Robert Faulder. pp. 118–21.
  5. ^ Original: Museo del Prado, c. 1636-1640, oil on panel.
  6. ^ 480 x 650mm. See Christie's Sale 6223, Prints (30 Nov 1999), Lot 22. Examples in Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, Catalogue gives series date attribution 1638. Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Rubens c 1625: Kunsthistorischesmuseum, Vienna, Austria. E.g.Fitzwilliam Museum Accession K.28.
  8. ^ Rubens c 1620: Gemäldegalerie (Stiftung Preußischer Kulturbesitz), Berlin, Germany.
  9. ^ E.g. Baillieu Library loan colln., Ian Potter Museum of Art, Melbourne.
  10. ^ Rubens - Adler 36 (Berlin State Museum). E.g. Fitzwilliam Museum Accession K.23.
  11. ^ cf. John Gage, Colour and Culture (University of California Press 1999), p.95.
  12. ^ E.g. Fitzwilliam Museum Accession K.24.
  13. ^ Rubens c. 1618: Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Antwerp. E.g. Fitzwilliam Museum Accession K.22.

Attribution:

  • Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainBryan, Michael (1886). "Bolswert, Scheltius à". In Graves, Robert Edmund (ed.). Bryan's Dictionary of Painters and Engravers (A–K). Vol. I (3rd ed.). London: George Bell & Sons.
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