AMSTERDAM.- Paul van Vianens greatest masterpiece has gone on display in the
Rijksmuseum. This solid gold cup is regarded as the most important of all the treasures ever to belong to the Dutch royal family. It was made in 1610 by the most famous gold- and silversmith in the history of the Netherlands. Since 1881 it has been part of a German private collection. In view of its origin, last year the cup has been offered to the Rijksmuseum. The Wessels family was willing to buy the cup and place it on long-term loan to the Rijksmuseum. The gold cup is on display in the Rijksmuseums Gallery of Honour for all to admire and enjoy.
Taco Dibbits, director of the Rijksmuseum: Paul van Vianen is to gold- and silversmithing what Rembrandt is to painting. It is wonderful that the Wessels family has made it possible for everyone to see this gold treasure, and this marks the fulfilment of a long-cherished dream of the Rijksmuseum.
Royal property
Paul van Vianen (1570-1613) was commissioned to make the gold cup by the Duke of Braunschweig and Lüneburg, a prominent figure at the Prague Royal Court. In the 17th century, as today, gold was a very costly material, and the cup had a prominent place in the royal Kunstkammer, a room for the display of art objects. In 1623 the gold cup passed into the possession of the dukes eldest daughter, Sophie Hedwig. She was married to Ernst-Casimir van Nassau-Dietz, the stadtholder of the northern Dutch provinces of Friesland and Drenthe, and the cup was kept in his royal Kunstkammer in the capital Leeuwarden. From 1711 the cup was housed in the treasury of the Kunstkammer in The Hague, and it remained the property of the Dutch Royal House of Orange until 1881; Paul van Vianens solid gold cup is widely regarded as the House of Oranges most important treasure. After the marriage of Wilhelm Prince zu Wied and Marie von Oranien-Nassau, Princess of the Netherlands, in 1870 the cup was donated to the family zu Wied in 1881, with whom it remained until recently.
Diana and Actaeon
The lid of the cup shows gods enacting a line from a play by Terence, which asserts that, in order to thrive, love (Venus) must have food (Ceres) and wine (Bacchus). The scene on the body of the cup depicts a poem by Ovid in which Actaeon goes hunting and unwittingly chances upon the goddess Diana as she bathes accompanied by her nymphs. He is unable to avert his eyes, and she punishes him for this. The hunter is transformed into a stag and is subsequently murdered by his friends. Juxtaposed in this way, the two stories form a guide for love: love can flourish only if there is sufficient food and drink, and merciless punishment awaits those, like Actaeon, who yield to temptation.
Paul van Vianen
Paul van Vianen was the most important scion of a famous family of silversmiths from Utrecht, and he enjoyed star status in his lifetime. Subsequent generations of silversmiths looked to him as their primary source of inspiration, and artists collected his original works or copies of them. Rembrandt was among the artists who owned plaster casts of objects made by him. Van Vianen ventured out into the great wide world at the age of 16, and he worked at several famous Central European courts before ultimately joining the Prague Royal Court of the Holy Roman Emperor Rudolph II, which he continued to serve until his death in May 1613.
Paul van Vianen in the Rijksmuseum
As the only famous work by Paul van Vianen still in private hands, the gold cup has been high on the Rijksmuseums wish list since the 19th century. It was assumed, however, that this masterpiece would never be added to a public collection, and for this reason in 1881 the Rijksmuseum had a replica made in gilt copper. The Rijksmuseum collection includes a number of other works by Paul van Vianen, namely sketches, drawings, plaques and reliefs, as well as two silver objects: a drinking vessel from 1607, and a ewer and basin from 1613. The gold cup Van Vianen made in 1610 can now be added to this list, and is on display for all to see and admire.