(Bergen op Zoom 1753 – 1805 Middelburg)
Arrival of the 131st demi-brigade ‘de Bataille’ at Flushing
Oil on panel, 38 x 45 cm
Signed on driftwood lower right: D. Kleijne Fe.
Formerly Rob Kattenburg collection
Purchased by the National Maritime Museum, Amsterdam
Marine painter David Kleyne was the scion of a clan of executioners, yet the largest family of headsmen that ever set ground in the Netherlands. His father Hendrik took the position of hangman in Bergen op Zoom, in succession of his father-in-law. David’s uncles, great uncles, cousins and nephews used to torture and carry out death sentences against a day wage of six guilders. They operated through the whole of the Netherlands: Haarlem, The Hague, Breda, ’s-Hertogenbosch and Flushing. Mentioning the name ‘Kleyne’ was often enough force to extort confessions from a suspect.
However, scourge and executioner’s sword were not desired by the young David. With the death of his father, he recommends his cousin to take the position of executioner. Choosing the life of a Master Painter, David had to be content with a remote income. He accepted work as a wallpaper painter and he presumably assisted Jan van Os in painting marines. His work is distinguished by a keen observation of ships. With his death in 1805 he left a booklet containing ‘A collection of […] vessels of different Types / drawn by the sea and ship painter D. Kleyne’. Some of the drawings from this album are kept in the Maritime Museum of Rotterdam. Altogether the collection is an important document for interpreting the different types of ships in use around 1800. David Kleyne and his fellow townsman Engel Hoogerheyden are considered the most important chroniclers of Zeeland’s maritime history around 1800.
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