TOOROP, Jan - b. 1858 Purworejo, Java, d. 1928 Den Haag - WGA

TOOROP, Jan

(b. 1858 Purworejo, Java, d. 1928 Den Haag)

Dutch painter. He was born in Purworejo, Java, Dutch East Indies, in 1872, he moved with his family to the Netherlands. He took a course in drawing at the Polytechnische School in Delft (1876-79). He also studied at the Rijksakademie voor Beeldende Kunsten in Amsterdam (1880-82) and at the Ecole des Arts Décoratifs in Brussels (1882-85). In Amsterdam he joined the St Lukas Society, and in Belgium he was a founder-member of Les XX in 1884.

Although he had met Jozef Israëls in 1880 and respected the style of the Hague School, he was more attracted by what he saw in Brussels, particularly work by French artists. His portraits of 1884 are painted in an Impressionist style. With other members of Les XX he trained himself in plein-air; he learnt from James Ensor how to apply colours with a palette knife and how to use white with the same intensity as other colours. His style, however, remained austere and his scenes of workmen show a sensitive realism reminiscent of Gustave Courbet’s work. During his years in Brussels, Toorop worked in various styles, such as Realism, Impressionism, Neo-Impressionism and Post-Impressionism.

After his marriage to an Annie Hall, a British woman, in 1886, Toorop alternated his time between The Hague, England and Brussels, and after 1890 also the Dutch seaside town of Katwijk aan Zee. During this period he developed his own unique Symbolist style, with dynamic, unpredictable lines based on Javanese motifs, highly stylised willowy figures, and curvilinear designs.

Thereafter he turned to Art Nouveau styles, in which a similar play of lines is used for decorative purposes, without any apparent symbolic meaning. In 1905 he converted to Catholicism and began producing religious works. He also created book illustrations, posters, and stained glass designs.

Delft Salad Oil ('Delftsche Slaolie')
Delft Salad Oil ('Delftsche Slaolie') by

Delft Salad Oil ('Delftsche Slaolie')

Jan Toorop ranks alongside Van Gogh and Piet Mondrian as one of the most important Dutch artists around 1900. All three took their bearings from the latest international developments in the art of their time, and all three produced work that influenced other artists. For example, Toorop was a major source of inspiration for Gustav Klimt.

Toorop’s work is popular with the general public in the Netherlands and is often associated with Art Nouveau, mainly because of his well-known advertising poster for Delft salad oil. Indeed, this poster is so well-known in the Netherlands that Art Nouveau is often called ‘slaoliestijl’ (= “salad oil style’). Fewer people are aware that Toorop worked in many other styles. He also produced Neo-Impressionist, Pointillist and Symbolist paintings and his innovations in painting included the use of flat areas of colour. It used to be thought that he switched constantly between these styles, but recent research has revealed a clear line in his artistic development. He responded to his environment and regularly modified existing works. In this respect, he was an extremely progressive artist.

The manufacturer of Delft Salad Oil commissioned from Jan Toorop a poster with his “holy”, dream figures of women. Crimped into the ornamentation of their duplicated hair, with exaggeratedly gothicized, long-fingered hands that protrude chastely from the huge puffed sleeves like priceless revelations, they clutch a bottle of oil and a serving spoon.

Shell Gathering on the Beach
Shell Gathering on the Beach by

Shell Gathering on the Beach

In the 1880s Toorop shared with James Ensor and other Brussels artists an interest in Neo-Impressionism. The work he painted, exhibited with Les Vingt, used muted tonal harmonies influenced by Whistler, as well as a systematic division of brushwork and a Pointillist use of colour dots derived from the Neo-Impressionists.

The Dunes and the Sea at Zoutlande
The Dunes and the Sea at Zoutlande by

The Dunes and the Sea at Zoutlande

The New Generation
The New Generation by

The New Generation

Jan Toorop was one of the most significant Symbolist artists around 1900. He used a very personal style of parallel wavy lines that became the ‘salad oil style’, named after a poster that Toorop made for salad oil. The child in the high chair is Toorop’s daughter Charley; she would later become an artist herself.

The Past
The Past by

The Past

In the Beurs van Berlage (Amsterdam Stock Exchange), Jan Toorop created three large tableaus made from tiles: The Past, The Present, and The Future.

The Sphinx
The Sphinx by
The Three Brides
The Three Brides by

The Three Brides

In Toorop’s imagery, religions fuse into unity. On each side of the innocent human bride, in symmetrical antithesis, are the nun-like bride of Christ and, thirsting for human sacrifice, the bride of Satan. They are surrounded by ghostly creatures in the manner of Javanese art.

Three Women with Flowers
Three Women with Flowers by

Three Women with Flowers

In the 1880s Toorop shared with James Ensor and other Brussels artists an interest in Neo-Impressionism. The work he painted, exhibited with Les Vingt, used muted tonal harmonies influenced by Whistler, as well as a systematic division of brushwork and a Pointillist use of colour dots derived from the Neo-Impressionists.

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