General Verkolje was a versatile artist who worked as a painter, draughtsman and engraver. His subject matter was mainly portraits and
genre scenes. He was also a gifted
mezzotint artist, who according Houbraken, discovered the technique on his own. In his portrait work Verkolje was representative of the style then current in The Hague and Amsterdam rather than that in vogue in Delft. Verkolje was much in demand as a portraitist and was able to fetch high prices for his portraits. His sitters were a who's who of Delft society of his time: the scientist
Antonie van Leeuwenhoek (whom he portrayed on canvas and in mezzotint), the prominent lawyer and bailiff
Johan de la Faille and his wife (both works are in the
Wadsworth Atheneum), the vicar Cornelius van Aken, the painter
Pieter Jansz van Asch, and the burgomaster and historian
Dirk van Bleiswijk. Verkolje's genre paintings typically depict elegant figures in interiors engaged in music making or the playing of games. Often the protagonists are couples engaged in courtship. A dog is always present. In
The messenger (1674, the
Mauritshuis) Verkolje reprises the theme of the delivery of a letter, which had been treated previously by other Delft artists such as Vermeer.
The Messenger shows a young couple playing backgammon in an elegant room. They have been interrupted by a regimental messenger who has entered the room to deliver a letter likely calling the young man to duty. The young couple are clearly startled by the arrival of the messenger just as is the dog in the room. The openly emotional reaction of the participants in the scene contrasts with that of the persons in Vermeer's works when receiving letters. Vermeer's figures react in a more contemplative rather than an emotional manner. Verkolje also tended to add a greater naturalness to this figures than Vermeer. The portraits of Verkolje often doubled as genre pieces in their extensive detail and the addition of emblematic and symbolic elements. This is clear in the double
Distinguished Gentleman and Lady in an Interior (at Hoogsteder & Hoogsteder). The crossed trunks of the trees visible outside on the left and their intertwined crowns possibly symbolise the commitment to each other of the sitters while the fountain is likely an allegory of the source of life or a reference to fertility.
Prints Jan Verkolje started engraving in 1670. The mezzotint work of Jan Verkolje shows the influence of the smoother tone developed by
Abraham Blooteling. Various of his prints were made after portraits by Lely and Wissing and were printed in England even though Verkolje likely never visited England. In addition to his portrait prints, Verkolje also produced prints of mythological scenes and genre scenes, some after
Jacob Ochtervelt and
Hendrick Terbrugghen. A well-known mezzotint work of Verkolje is the
Venus and Adonis. It was made after a painting by Verkolje the whereabouts of which is now unknown. In the work Verkolje demonstrates his mastery of the mezzotint technique for which he was much admired in his time. He was able to render the textures of the fabrics in a very realistic manner and to visualise the softness of the clouds. == References ==