In 1697 he painted a curious group portrait of a family dinner, with the title
Mayor Saco van Aitzema of Dokkum and his wife offer Tsar Peter the Great a meal in Amsterdam. He travelled to Rome after that, because according to Houbraken, Wigmana met with the painter
Daniel Seiter in Rome in 1699. Houbraken mentioned him again in his biographical sketch of
Pieter van Mierevelt, because Wigmana owned one of his paintings. Houbraken intended to write a biographical sketch of Wigmana in his birth year of 1673, but never got that far (he died before publication of Volume III, which ended with birth year 1659). According to the RKD he was a pupil of
Jelle Sibrands and travelled to Rome where he received the nickname
Friese Raphael. According to
Johan van Gool, who called him a
narcissus in his biographical sketch of him, Wigmana was in Rome in 1700, but Van Gool did not believe that he got his nickname from joining the
Bentvueghels, but rather that Wigmana received his nickname of the
Frisian Raphael because he made so many copies of the works of
Raphael. Wigmana wrote a book about the art of painting that was published after his death in 1742, and which contained his autobiography with an engraving by
Bernard Picart after a self-portrait. ==References==