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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Jan Toorop, Pastor Van Straelen

Jan Toorop (1858-1928)

Pastor Van Straelen, 1902
Pencil, crayon and chalk on paper
15⅜ by 11⅝ inches (39 by 29.5 cm.)
Signed, dated and inscribed 'Jan Toorop 1902 Pastoor van Straelen Katwijk a/d Rijn'
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Throughout his career Jan Toorop focused on portraits, in sketches and paintings. Although the present portrait predates Toorop’s conversion to Catholicism in 1905, his fascination with the church is already...
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Throughout his career Jan Toorop focused on portraits, in sketches and paintings. Although the present portrait predates Toorop’s conversion to Catholicism in 1905, his fascination with the church is already apparent. During a trip to Paris in 1902 with his family, Toorop met with Maurice Denis, a catholic painter who is held responsible for his later conversion.[1] Although his wife previously converted, Toorop became very close around the same time with Pastor Bernardus Cornelius van Straelen, who lent him books. In 1902, Toorop drew B.C. van Straelen (1859-1909) from Katwijk, a friendly minister who played a forming role in the artist’s life. The candid vicar is being drawn with the local Saint Jeroen in the background.


Jeroen van Noordwijk, was a late eight century catholic priest from noble Scottish descend, who dedicated his life to Christianity. To spread the gospel, Jeroen came in 851 to the coastal village of Noordwijk, nearby Katwijk, founding the first church. When in 856 the Vikings arrived on the shore of Noordwijk, they forced the population to adore their numerous gods again. When Jeroen resisted, he was beheaded. Legend is, that by the tenth century, nobody knew the whereabout of his remains. He appeared in a dream of Northbodo, a young boy from Noordwijk, asking for his bones to be exhumed and reburied in the cloisters of Egmond. Initially, Northbodo refused, and his horses disappeared. After a second appearance, Northbodo complied and his horses returned to him. Jeroen is now the saint of lost things.


In 1904, Toorop drew Pastor van Straelen again, wearing the same costume and the same pose, now in the Museum Catharijneconvent in Utrecht. This portrait was used as the frontispice for Van Straelen’s Het Ideaal veelzijdig beschouwd (The Ideal: Multi-Sided Contemplation), published in 1905 and for which Toorop designed the leather bookbinding.


[1] Exh.cat. Jan Toorop. De Nijmeegse Jaren 1908-1916, Nijmegen, 1978, p. 27

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Provenance

Mr. Mesdag, Hilversum, The Netherlands

Private collection, United Kingdom

Sale, Christie’s, Amsterdam, 9 June 2015, lot 98

Private collection, United States

Exhibitions

Amsterdam, Frans Buffa & Zonen, Tentoonstelling van schilderijen, aquarellen en teeekeningen door Jan Toorop, 1904

Literature

Paul Buschmann (ed.), Onze Kunst: voortzetting van de Vlaamsche school, 1904, Vol. 5, cat. 10, p. 187, ill. 180, p. 196

Albert Plasschaert, Johannes Theodorus Toorop, Baarn 1911, p. 20 & 31

Albert Plasschaert, Jan Toorop, Amsterdam 1925, p. 24, no. 3, p. 41

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