Mountains by Willem Bastiaan Tholen
Mountains by Willem Bastiaan Tholen
Mountains by Willem Bastiaan Tholen
Mountains by Willem Bastiaan Tholen

Mountains 1880 - 1920

Willem Bastiaan Tholen

Pencil
ConditionVery good
Currently unavailable via Gallerease

  • About the artwork
    Bastiaan Tholen grew up in an artistic environment in Kampen. He painted many landscapes, forest views, city and village views. He also made portraits of other well known painters such as the Arntzenius family.
    This drawing by Bastiaan Tholen is owned by the latter family. The Arntzenius and Tholen families lived together in a villa in The Hague. At the beginning of 1890, Tholen and his wife Coba Muller moved to the top floor of this 'Canal Villa' at the White Bridge in The Hague. The villa was at the place where now Madurodam is.

    The ground floor was occupied by the clerk of Dutch parlement, Mr. Abraham Robert (Bram) Arntzenius (1850-1929) and his young family. Arntzenius wife Jkvr Constance Boddaert (1857-1883) died after the birth of the triplets. In 1885 Arntzenius remarried to Cobi Witsen, sister of the Amsterdam impressionist Willem Witsen and the best friend of Tholen's wife Coba. Willem Witsen was a fellow student and friend of Tholen.
  • About the artist

    Willem Bastiaan Tholen( Amsterdam, 13 February 1860 – The Hague, 5 December 1931) was a Dutch painter, draftsman and printmaker with some connections to members of the Hague School and later associated with the Amsterdam Impressionism movement.

    When Tholen was five years old, his family moved to Kampen. There he became friendly with the young Jan Voerman and they entered the Amsterdam academy together in 1876. Tholen earned his certificate of proficiency within a year, in turn enrolling in the Polytechnic School in Delft, where he attended drawing classes for two years. Having concluded his studies there in 1878 with a secondary school teaching certificate, he went to work as a drawing instructor at the evening secondary school in Gouda.

    He spent three months in Brussels in the studio of Paul Gabriël, from whom he received his first real instruction in painting. In the following years Gabriël's advice was of particular importance for Tholen, as they worked together en plein air for many summers near Kampen and Giethoorn, among other places. In Gouda (1878-9) and Kampen (1880–85) he taught draftsmanship in order to support himself but after 1885 concentrated entirely on his own work.

    In 1885 Willem Witsen invited Tholen to visit his family's country house near Baarn, where their contemporaries, George Hendrik Breitner and Anton Mauve were frequent guests. From 1887 he lived in The Hague, where he became friendly with other painters of The Hague school. He took an active part in the artistic life of The Hague and was a member of the Pulchri Studio.

    Tholen established his reputation in The Hague with his landscapes of the countryside around Kampen and views of the woods near Baarn. He also frequently painted views of The Hague, the woods of Scheveningen and a series of interiors in which a window typically provides a view outside: a garden, a street illumined by sunlight or the rhythmically grouped roofs of a city. He painted the fishing boats on the beach in Scheveningen, but in contrast to Jacob Maris (whom he greatly admired), Tholen did not employ the desolate sea as a backdrop, but rather, the bustling village. He used the hustle-bustle of the city more often as a theme than was generally the case in the Hague School, depicting such subjects as construction sites, slaughterhouses, stonecutters and the sand excavations and sand barge captains on the canal between The Hague and Scheveningen.

Artwork details

Category
Material & Technique
Colour