Pictura (Allegory on Painting)

Louis Royer, c. 1855

Pictura staat op een vierkante plint op het linkerbeen en met het gebogen rechter iets terzijde. In de linkerhand draagt zij een verfpotje, in de rechter een penseel voor de borst. Een sluier valt tot over de rug. Zij draagt een lang hemd, dat linker schouder en borst onbedekt laat, en een om het middel geslagen mantel.

  • Artwork typesculpture
  • Object numberBK-15522
  • Dimensionsheight 31 cm x width 12 cm x depth 8 cm
  • Physical characteristicsterracotta

Identification

  • Title(s)

    Pictura (Allegory on Painting)

  • Object type

  • Object number

    BK-15522

  • Description

    Pictura staat op een vierkante plint op het linkerbeen en met het gebogen rechter iets terzijde. In de linkerhand draagt zij een verfpotje, in de rechter een penseel voor de borst. Een sluier valt tot over de rug. Zij draagt een lang hemd, dat linker schouder en borst onbedekt laat, en een om het middel geslagen mantel.

  • Part of catalogue


Creation

  • Creation

    sculptor: Louis Royer, Netherlands

  • Dating

    c. 1855

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Material and technique

  • Physical description

    terracotta

  • Dimensions

    height 31 cm x width 12 cm x depth 8 cm


This work is about

  • Subject


Acquisition and rights

  • Credit line

    Gift of the heirs of C. van Eeghen, Amsterdam

  • Acquisition

    gift 1943

  • Copyright

  • Provenance

    Collection of the artist;{According to the catalogue for the sale, Amsterdam (Roos), 17 November 1868.} his sale, Amsterdam (Roos), 17 November 1868, no. 62/3; ...; collection Catharina van Eeghen (1860-1943), Amsterdam;{Note RMA.} her nephew, Christiaan Pieter van Eeghen (1880-1968), Amsterdam;{Note RMA.} by whom donated, with 11 other objects, to the museum, 1943


Documentation

  • Jaarverslag Rijksmuseum (1943), p. 11.


Related objects

  • Related


Persistent URL


Louis Royer

Pictura, Belonging to a Group Representing the Four Fine Arts

Netherlands, c. 1855

Technical notes

Modelled and fired. Finished with a cream-coloured final coat. On the bottom there is a conical cavity.


Condition

The tip of the paintbrush in the right hand and the left corner of the pedestal are missing. The lower part of the index finger of the left hand, the right corner of the pedestal at the front, part of the garment below the left arm, a section below the right knee in the fold have flaked off.


Provenance

Collection of the artist;1According to the catalogue for the sale, Amsterdam (Roos), 17 November 1868. his sale, Amsterdam (Roos), 17 November 1868, no. 62/3; ...; collection Catharina van Eeghen (1860-1943), Amsterdam;2Note RMA. her nephew, Christiaan Pieter van Eeghen (1880-1968), Amsterdam;3Note RMA. by whom donated, with 11 other objects, to the museum, 1943

Object number: BK-15522

Credit line: Gift of the heirs of C. van Eeghen, Amsterdam


Entry

These two classical female figures in Greek attire personify Gravura (Engraving, BK-15523) and Pictura (Painting, shown here). Gravura can be identified by the stylus in her hand and the writing tablet, which she rests against her hip. Pictura’s attributes are a paintbrush and paint pot. The terracottas originate from the collection of the Amsterdam Van Eeghen family, from whom they can be directly traced to their maker, Louis Royer (1793- 1868). It is clear from the sale catalogue of Royer’s estate that they were part of an ensemble of four terracottas, together with the figures Architectura (Architecture) and Scultura (Sculpture) the present whereabouts of which are unknown.4Sale, collection Louis Royer (1793-1868), Amsterdam (Roos), 17-19 November 1868, no. 62. Here is recorded that, prior to the sale, the complete ensemble was acquired by Christiaan Pieter van Eeghen. In the nineteenth century the four were considered to represent the most important visual art forms and they can often be found in the context of art societies, academies or museums. For instance, the roof of the Rijksmuseum building, built round 1884, is decorated with personifications of these four fine arts.

Although there is no documentary proof, it is likely that Royer made the terracottas as models for sculptures that were added to the facade of the building of the Maatschappij Arti et Amicitiae in 1856. In 1839 Royer was one of the founders of this Amsterdam artist society. Nevertheless, the board opted for the designs of the younger sculptor, Franz Stracké (1820-1898). His female figures, also portraying Painting, Sculpture, Architecture and Engraving (fig. a), are more natural and lively than Royer’s elegant but somewhat rigid, neoclassical interpretations.

Royer’s terracottas derive from well-known classical sculptures that he could have seen during his stay in Rome from 1824 to 1828. His Gravura was based on a Juno from Villa Medici and his Pictura on the Juno Cesi in the Capitoline Museum.5Langendijk in W. Bergé, Heimwee naar de klassieken: De beelden van Mathieu Kessels en zijn tijdgenoten, 1815-1840, exh. cat. Den Bosch (Noordbrabants Museum) 1994-95, p. 156. Royer adapted the positioning of the figures’ arms and added the suitable attributes to turn the goddesses into allegories.

Langendijk observed that the lower half of Pictura’s garment resembles that worn by the terracotta Madonna in the collection of Museum Amstelkring (Amsterdam) and that of the Madonna corresponds with a design drawing for a sculpture Royer made for the Antonius church in Scheveningen.6G. van den Hout and E. Langendijk (eds.), Louis Royer 1793-1868: Een Vlaamse beeldhouwer in Amsterdam, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Museum Amstelkring) 1994, p. 38; Langendijk in W. Bergé, Heimwee naar de klassieken: De beelden van Mathieu Kessels en zijn tijdgenoten, 1815-1840, exh. cat. Den Bosch (Noordbrabants Museum) 1994-95, p. 157. He based the top part of the headscarf on the seated figure of Jurisprudentia in a design drawing he made round 1858 for the monument (meanwhile lost) to the Leiden professor of Roman and civil law, C.J. van Assen.7W. Bergé, Heimwee naar de klassieken: De beelden van Mathieu Kessels en zijn tijdgenoten, 1815-1840, exh. cat. Den Bosch (Noordbrabants Museum) 1994-95, no. 74. In fact, Royer often recycled successful elements of earlier compositions - a customary practice among sculptors in those days.

Bieke van der Mark, 2026


Literature

J. Leeuwenberg with the assistance of W. Halsema-Kubes, Beeldhouwkunst in het Rijksmuseum, coll. cat. Amsterdam 1973, no. 453b, with earlier literature; Langendijk in W. Bergé, Heimwee naar de klassieken: De beelden van Mathieu Kessels en zijn tijdgenoten, 1815-1840, exh. cat. Den Bosch (Noordbrabants Museum) 1994-95, no. 66


Citation

B. van der Mark, 2026, 'Louis Royer, Pictura, Belonging to a Group Representing the Four Fine Arts, Netherlands, c. 1855', in F. Scholten and B. van der Mark (eds.), European Sculpture in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: https://data.rijksmuseum.nl/20035886

(accessed 22 mei 2026 03:15:36 UTC+0).

Figures

  • fig. a Franz Stracké, Allegories of the Arts of Painting, Sculpture, Architecture and Engraving, bronze casts from 1989 after the original wooden models from 1856. Facade Arti et Amicitiae building, Amsterdam


Footnotes

  • 1According to the catalogue for the sale, Amsterdam (Roos), 17 November 1868.
  • 2Note RMA.
  • 3Note RMA.
  • 4Sale, collection Louis Royer (1793-1868), Amsterdam (Roos), 17-19 November 1868, no. 62. Here is recorded that, prior to the sale, the complete ensemble was acquired by Christiaan Pieter van Eeghen.
  • 5Langendijk in W. Bergé, Heimwee naar de klassieken: De beelden van Mathieu Kessels en zijn tijdgenoten, 1815-1840, exh. cat. Den Bosch (Noordbrabants Museum) 1994-95, p. 156.
  • 6G. van den Hout and E. Langendijk (eds.), Louis Royer 1793-1868: Een Vlaamse beeldhouwer in Amsterdam, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Museum Amstelkring) 1994, p. 38; Langendijk in W. Bergé, Heimwee naar de klassieken: De beelden van Mathieu Kessels en zijn tijdgenoten, 1815-1840, exh. cat. Den Bosch (Noordbrabants Museum) 1994-95, p. 157.
  • 7W. Bergé, Heimwee naar de klassieken: De beelden van Mathieu Kessels en zijn tijdgenoten, 1815-1840, exh. cat. Den Bosch (Noordbrabants Museum) 1994-95, no. 74.