Maerten de Vos, Moses and the Tables of the Law, surrounded by Members of the Antwerp Panhuys and Hooftman Families.
Mauritshuis, The Hague, inv. no. 249.
Frans Pourbus the Elder (Bruges 1545/46 - 1581 Antwerp)
Frans ‘the Elder’ Pourbus was born in Bruges, the son of the renowned painter Pieter Pourbus. Originally from Gouda, Pieter had moved to Bruges at a young age, where he established himself as a distinguished painter of portraits and religious compositions. Frans' mother, Anna Blondeel, was the daughter of Lancelot Blondeel (1498 – 4 March 1561), a prominent painter, architect, surveyor, and cartographer active in Bruges. Frans began his artistic training under his father, who taught him to paint in the traditional Flemish style. Although the exact year he joined his father's workshop is unknown, by 1550—at just 15 years old—he had already become the chief assistant. By 1564, Pourbus was working in the Antwerp studio of Frans Floris, a leading artist known for history paintings and portraits. Floris played a significant role in the Northern Renaissance movement known as Romanism, which incorporated Italian High Renaissance influences into Flemish art. It is likely that Pieter Pourbus, familiar with Floris, sent his son to study under him.
Frans I Pourbus is best known for his religious and portrait paintings, with a few genre scenes also attributed to him. His portrait sitters were primarily members of the rising mercantile class, though he also painted clergy, aristocrats, and foreign dignitaries. According to Karel van Mander, Pourbus had a particular talent for depicting animals and trees with remarkable naturalism. Pourbus received numerous commissions for religious compositions, often from patrons outside Antwerp. Among his major works are The History of Saint Andrew (1572), a series of 14 panels, and the Triptych of Viglius Aytta (1571), both created for St. Bavo’s Cathedral in Ghent.
In 1574, he was commissioned by St. Martin’s Abbey in Tournai to redecorate the church’s choir following the destruction caused by the Beeldenstorm of 1566. He produced 17 paintings in three series: a Passion of Christ series for the choir, The Crucified Christ with the Thieves for the high altar, and additional panels depicting the Life of Saint Martin, which adorned the choir stalls.During Pourbus' lifetime, portrait painting flourished in the Habsburg Netherlands, with artists like Anthonis Mor and Adriaen Thomasz. Key producing similar works. Due to stylistic similarities, their paintings are sometimes misattributed to each other. Most of Pourbus' known portraits depict affluent members of the middle class, though he also portrayed higher clergy, local aristocrats, and foreign figures. Some of his identified sitters include Dutch statesman Viglius van Aytta and Abraham Grapheus. However, the identities of many of his subjects remain uncertain, and art historians continue to debate certain attributions.
Pourbus also painted family portraits, two of which have survived. One of the most notable is The Hoefnagel Family (c. 1580, Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium). This painting portrays the prominent Antwerp family gathered around a table, likely commemorating the wedding of Balthasar Hoefnagel and Anna van Lieffelt. In his portraits, Pourbus demonstrated a keen eye for detail and psychological depth. His ability to capture both character and wealth contributed significantly to his success. This is particularly evident in the present Portrait of Peeter van Panhuys, where the sitter’s finely modeled features and expressive gaze convey a contemplative presence. The precision in rendering textures—such as that of the ruff framing the subject’s face and the fabric of his clothes — highlights Pourbus' mastery of portraiture.
Depicted at half length, looking confidently towards the audience and dressed in a beautiful black doublet with a heavy gold chain, van Panhuys is clearly aware of his status and importance. He can be identified with confidence, as he was also depicted twelve years later in Maerten de Vos' famous painting Moses and the Tables of the Law, surrounded by Members of the Antwerp Panhuys and Hooftman Families, now at the Mauritshuis Museum (inv. no. 249; in the Mauritshuis picture, van Panhuys is standing second from the right).
Peeter van Panhuys was born in Limbourg in 1529. Around 1555 he was active as an agent in London for the wealthy merchant and banker Gillis Hooftman, who was an important patron of Maerten de Vos. On 1 December 1559 he became a poorter (citizen) of Antwerp. In 1577 he became a steward of Antwerp and in 1582 he even became the city treasurer. Van Panhuys, now Lord of IJsselaer and Soolhof, had become a wealthy man himself. After his first wife Catherina Hermans had died, he married Margaretha, Gillis’ niece, in 1561. The couple had five children. (On the Mauritshuis painting, Margaretha can be seen sitting to the right in a yellow dress, surrounded by her children.) Due to the religious upheavals, van Panhuys and his family had to flee Antwerp in 1585 and went to Amsterdam, where he and his wife died shortly thereafter. They were buried in the Oude Kerk, where their tomb can still be seen.
Provenance
Belgian private collection.