10 museomag 02 ‘ 2022
Detail from portrait of Adriaen Dircksz van Leyden, c. 1560.
all the Dutch provinces in 1543, he sought allies who
could defend and guarantee his interests there. His
confidant, Adriaen van Leyden, will therefore have been
made one of the highest noblemen in the northern
Netherlands, with the elevation to Baron of the Holy
Roman Empire on 4 April 1548. Such a status certainly
warranted confirmation with a formal portrait, espe-
cially when a few years later – as in the case of Adriaen
van Leyden – further appointments were added to this,
to key positions in the city administration of an impor-
tant city like Delft.
PORTRAIT PAINTED TO THE ELITE
Ideally, the painter would be the best one the couple
could afford and preferably the same painter used for
such portraits by their new-found peers. For the highest
elite of the Spanish government in the Low Countries,
there were in fact only two painters from whom
to choose for portrait commissions: Antonius Mor
(Antionio Moro) van Dashorst (1520-1577) and Willem
Key (1516-1568). Philip II of Spain, the Duke of
Alva, William of Orange, Margaret of Parma, Antoine
Perrenot de Granvelle, they were all portrayed by one
or the other. Antonius Mor was almost always on the
road and his style does not correspond to that of
the portraits of the Van Leyden couple. Willem Key, on
the other hand, was, literally and figuratively, eminent-
ly situated in Antwerp, in one of the most beautiful
houses on the Grote Markt there and as dean of the
guild of Antwerp painters, to accept the portrait com-
mission.
In the earliest documentation that I found on both
paintings, there is always consistently mention of
Willem Key as the painter, so everything fitted. That
the man’s portrait was initially attributed to Nicolas
Neufchâtel is not surprising, as the painting style
and compositions in the portraits of both artists are
sometimes very similar. Key and Neufchâtel studied
and worked, shortly after each other, under the same
teacher, Pieter Coecke van Aelst, in Antwerp. How-
ever, around 1560, when Adriaen van Leyden must
have been looking for a portrait painter that suited
his ambitions, Key was already an established name
and Neufchâtel was still at the beginning of a glorious
career in Nuremberg. Moreover, the latter almost
always painted on canvas, whereas the portraits in
REUNITED AFTER 150 YEARS (2/2)
©
éric chenal