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GERARD VAN HONTHORST (159o-1656)

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Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 664 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GERARD
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VAN HONTHORST (159o-1656)
  , Dutch painter of Utrecht, was brought up at the school of Bloemart, who exchanged the style of the Franckens for that of the pseudo-Italians at the beginning of the 16th century . Infected thus early with a
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mania which came to be very general in Holland, Honthorst went to Italy, where he copied the
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naturalism and eccentricities of Michelangelo da Caravaggio . Home again about 1614, after acquiring a considerable practice in Rome, he set up a school at Utrecht which flourished exceedingly; and he soon became so fashionable that
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Sir Dudley Carleton, then
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English envoy at the Hague, recommended his
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works to the
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earl of Arundel and Lord Dorchester . At the same time the queen of Bohemia,
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sister of Charles I. and electress palatine, being an exile in Holland, gave him her countenance and asked him to teach her children
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drawing; and Honthorst, thus approved and courted, became known to Charles I., who invited him to England . There he painted several portraits, and a vast allegory, now at Hampton Court, of Charles and his queen as
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Diana and Apollo in the clouds receiving the duke of Buckingham as Mercury and
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guardian of the king of Bohemia's children . Charles I., whose taste was flattered alike by the energy of Rubens and the elegance of
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Van Dyck, was thus first captivated by the fanciful mediocrity of Honthorst, who though a poor executant had luckily for himself caught, as Lord Arundel said, " much of the manner of Caravaggio's colouring, then so much esteemed at Rome." It was his habit to transmute every subject into a
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night scene, from the Nativity, for which there was warrant in the example of Correggio, to the penitence of the Magdalen, for which there was no warrant at all . But unhappily this caprice, though " sublime in Allegri and Rembrandt," was but a phantasm in the hands of Honthorst, whose prosaic pencil was not capable of more than vulgar utterances, and
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art gained little from the repetition of these quaint vagaries . Sandrart gave the measure of Honthorst's popularity at this period when he says that he had as many as twenty apprentices at one time, each of whom paid him a
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fee of too florins a
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year . In 1623 he was president of his gild at Utrecht . After that he went to England, returning to settle anew at Utrecht, where he married . His position amongst artists was acknowledged to be important, and in 1626 he received a visit from Rubens, whom he painted as the honest man sought for and found by
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Diogenes Honthorst . In his home at Utrecht Honthorst succeeded in preserving the support of the English monarch, for whom he finished in 1631 a large picture of the king and queen of Bohemia " and all their children." For Lord Dorchester about the same period he completed some illustrations of the Odyssey; for the king of Denmark he composed incidents of Danish
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history, of which one example remains in the gallery of Copenhagen .

In the course of a large practice he had painted many likenesses—Charles I. and his queen, the duke of Buckingham, and the king and queen of Bohemia . He now became court painter to the princess of

Orange, settled (1637) at the Hague, and painted in succession at the Castle of Ryswick and the House in the Wood . The time not consumed in producing pictures was devoted to portraits . Even now his works are very numerous, and amply represented in English and
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Continental galleries . His most attractive pieces are those in which he cultivates the style of Caravaggio, those, namely, which represent taverns, with players, singers and eaters . He shows
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great skill in reproducing scenes illuminated by a single candle . But he seems to have studied too much in dark rooms, where the subtleties of flesh colour are lost in the dusky smoothness and
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uniform redness of tints procurable from farthing dips . Of great
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interest still, though rather sharp in outline and hard in modelling, are his portraits of the Duke of Buckingham and
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Family (Hampton Court), the King and Queen of Bohemia (Hanover and Combe Abbey), Mary de Medici (Amsterdam
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town-hall), 1628, the Stadtholders and their Wives (Amsterdam and Hague), Charles Louis and Rupert, Charles I.'s nephews (Louvre, St
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Petersburg, Combe Abbey and Willin), and Lord Craven (
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National Portrait Gallery) . His early form may be judged by a Lute-player (1614) at the Louvre, the Martyrdom of St John in S . M. della Scala at Rome, or the Liberation of Peter i. the Berlin 'Museum; his latest style is that of the House in the Wood (1648), where he appears to disadvantage by the side of Jordaens and others . Honthorst was succeeded by his
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brother William, born at Utrecht in 1604, who died, it is said, in 1666 . He lived chiefly in his native place, temporarily at Berlin .

But he has

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left little behind except a portrait at Amsterdam, and likenesses in the Berlin Museum of William and Mary of England .

End of Article: GERARD VAN HONTHORST (159o-1656)
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