3 - Wijck's Alchemical Artisans
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 November 2020
Summary
Abstract
The alchemical imagery of Thomas Wijck (1616-1677) challenges previous interpretations of laboratory scenes as purely satirical, negative comments on fraud, waste, and ruin. Far from fools or greedy con artists, Wijck’s alchemists instead inhabit painted worlds that resemble the real world outside their frames: the cluttered studios, busy workshops, and shared kitchens through which artists, artisans, and alchemists all moved. As a coherent and reinforcing body of images, Wijck's works provide a vision of alchemy as a discipline engaged with artistry, experiment, interaction, and communication: not simply an esoteric mystery or a fraudulent fool’s quest, but a vital and productive piece of the early modern world.
Keywords: Alchemy, Images of Science, Dutch Art, Domesticity, Artisans, 17th Century
Even among positive representations of alchemy, Wijck's painted laboratories offer a novel vision of the art. Though serious and skilled, Wijck’s alchemist-artisans are not in the employ of a prince or leading a team of dozens, as shown in sixteenth-century images by Stradanus, or certain works by Wijck's Flemish contemporary Teniers. Instead, Wijck's alchemists typically inhabit hybrid domestic-experimental spaces, places that serve as both workshop and family home: a scenario intimately recognizable to countless other early modern artisans, including metalsmiths and textile workers, but also artists. His practitioners sit comfortably astride the multiple identities of master, teacher, parent, scholar, and chymist. Wijck was also highly concerned with materials: both the alchemists’ and his own. But by omitting references to gold-making, he largely sidesteps the themes of greed and duplicity found in popular depictions of alchemical fraud and failure. Rather than highlighting coins or crucibles, he focuses on colored powders and raw matter that closely resemble pigments, dyestuffs, and other practical goods manufactured by chemical work. The respectability, harmony, and productivity of Wijck's alchemical workrooms re-imagines the curious space of the laboratory within the context of the familiar, as well as socially and economically vital, artisanal workshop. While Wijck’s pictures may not strike a contemporary audience as “modern,” their turn away from visual convention towards a new representation of urban artisanal life would have marked them as such for their period viewers.
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- Information
- Painted AlchemistsEarly Modern Artistry and Experiment in the Work of Thomas Wijck, pp. 97 - 148Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2019