Wednesday, April 23, 2025

Portrait of Constantijn Huygens and his Clerk by Thomas de Keyser (1627)

Fabulous portrait.

This masterpiece from the National Gallery in London features a picture which opens my new book.

Constantijn Huygens was a polymath. Secretary to two princes of Orange, diplomat, poet, musician, aficionado of painting, and owned a huge library and engaged in animated written correspondence with great intellectuals, including Descartes and contemporary painters - Pieter Lastman, Jan Lievens, Gerard Gerrit van Honthorst, Anthony van Dyck, Rembrandt etc. A giant during the Dutch Golden Age.

The objects on table - globe/maps, books, quill, papers etc. refer to a broad intellect.
Navigation instruments (?) and exquisite table cloth. So beautiful.

The distant gaze and the general expression of thoughtfulness and contemplation. 
His neatly trimmed beard and mustache suggest a refined gentleman.

10 comments:

  1. Those boots caught my eye right away. Riding boots? Did he just get off his horse, come inside, and immediately sat down to write some brilliant thought or another?

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  2. I agree that 17th century Dutch interiors were always meticulous and beautiful, and retain their special appeal centuries later. So even though I did not remember the name Thomas de Keyser, the connection with Pieter Lastman, Jan Lievens, van Honthorst, Anthony van Dyck and others was immediately clear.

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  3. Educated, knowledgeable and fine looking man.

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  4. What a fascinating figure—Constantijn Huygens truly embodied the spirit of the Dutch Golden Age, bridging art, science, and intellect in such a remarkable way!

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  5. As you say, the various accoutrements suggest someone refined. I wonder why he wears a hat indoors?

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