Michiel de Wael

Portrait of Michiel de Wael circa 1625 by Frans Hals
Pendant portrait of his wife, Cunera van Baersdorp

Michiel de Wael (bapt. 9 May 1596 buried 7 April 1659 in Haarlem), was a Dutch brewer and citizen of Haarlem, best known today for his portraits painted by Frans Hals. His grandfather, also a brewer, was one of the first Calvinists in the city and involved in the Siege of Haarlem.[1]

Biography

Michiel was the son of the wealthy Haarlem brewer and burgomaster Jan Michielsz de Wael (1557-1618) and Cornelia Anthonisdr Juyst. In 1582 his father Jan de Wael had married Cornelia Anthonisdr Juyst in Delft, aka Neeltje Thonis, from Brouwershaven.[2] In 1588 his father moved from Amsterdam to Haarlem, where he was appointed in the vroedschap. In 1597 Jan M. de Wael was one of the burgomasters of Haarlem. After having been an arbiter he became involved as an investor in the development of the new Amsterdam city quarter, known as the Lastage. In 1605 his father remarried and Aechte Adriaensdr Van Hoorn became his stepmother.[3][4]

Michiel had an elder brother Jan, a magistrate and burgomaster of Haarlem,[5] involved in the tulip mania [6] and in 1650 locked up in Loevestein; a brother Anthony, lawyer in Monnikendam [7] and a sister Geertruyd ,[8] founder of Hofje van Guurtje de Waal.

Together with his elder brother, De Wael owned the breweries De Son and 't Roode Hart.[9]

Michiel served as commissioner in the local court of justice, and served in the St. George civic militia.[10] Hals painted De Wael twice during his career with the civic guard company in Haarlem, as captain in The Banquet of the Officers of the St George Militia Company in 1627, and as "fiscaal" in The Officers of the St George Militia Company in 1639. He was painted yet again by Pieter Claesz Soutman in the same role in 1644.

For a long time this painting was dated 1640, but the striking similarity of his face with the version from 1627 and especially his dress has recently led art historians to conclude that this painting was probably a wedding pendant. He married Cunera van Baersdorp (Leiden 1600-Haarlem 1640), who was the daughter of a mayor of Leiden, on 22 April 1625 and this portrait probably dates from that time, as does his wife's pendant.[11] They were married exactly a half year after Cunera's mother died. That explains the bride's wedding dress in half mourning (a black skirt, white gloves and black and white bracelets but with lace).

In 1656 their 18-year-old, youngest daughter Josina married the 32-year-old Alkmaar writer Sierik Siersma in Haarlem. After Siersma died Josina moved back to Haarlem.[12] She inherited the portraits by Frans Hals of her parents and they were handed down via her descendants until the beginning of the 1800s.

  1. ^ Selected Essays of John Berger

References

  1. http://www.molair.nl/am-cd/cd700.html
  2. Collections of Paintings in Haarlem: 1572-1745, page 133, by Peter Biesboer (editor Carol Togneri), Getty Trust Publications, Los Angeles, 2001
  3. De vroedschap van Amsterdam 1578-1795, by J.E. Elias, 1963, Descendents of Wigbout de Wael, Volume I, p. 129
  4. Brouwen, branden en bedienen. Werkende vrouwen in de Nederlandse dranknijverheid, 1500-1800, by Marjolein van Dekken, 2009, p. 107
  5. Jan de Wael in Staatkundig Nederland: een woordenboek tot de biographische kaart van dien naam. T - Z, Volume 2, Issue 2, by Jacobus Scheltema, 1806, p. 440
  6. Tulipmania: Money, Honor, and Knowledge in the Dutch Golden Age by Anne Goldgar
  7. Groot algemeen historisch, geographisch, genealogisch, en oordeelkundig ...
  8. http://www.lustigegeesten.nl/prosopografie/prosopografie_more.php?search_fd0=H489
  9. Michiel de Wael in the RKD reference for the schutterstuk by Frans Hals in which he is portrayed
  10. Frans Hals: Exhibition on the Occasion of the Centenary of the Municipal Museum at Haarlem, 1862-1962., pp 56-57, publication Frans Hals Museum, 1962
  11. Marieke de Winkel,"Frans Hals’s Portraits of Michiel de Wael and Cunera van Baersdorp and of Jan de Wael and Aeltje Dircksdr Pater identified" in: Face Book: studies on Dutch and Flemish Portraiture of the 16th-18th Centuries, The Hague 2012, pp. 141-149
  12. Sierik Siersma in the DBNL

External links

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