This section provides a detailed description of the painting, based on a thorough visual examination conducted by a paintings conservator.
Overview
Support
The support of a painting refers to the material on which the paint layers are applied. Over time, artists have used a variety of materials as supports, including canvas, wooden panels, copper plates, cardboard, and paper. The choice of support influences the painting’s texture, durability, and how it ages. It can also offer valuable insights into the artwork’s origin, technique, and historical context.
An industrial canvas with rather fine yarns and a fairly open weave leaving the ground visible throughout the reverse.
Stretcher
A stretcher is a wooden frame used to stretch and secure a canvas. It is typically designed with expandable joints and small wooden wedges (called keys) that allow adjustments to maintain the tension of the canvas over time. This helps prevent sagging as the canvas responds to aging or changes in humidity. In contrast, a strainer is a similar wooden frame but non-expandable, meaning it cannot be adjusted once the canvas is mounted.
Mortise and tenon with rectangular corner plates
On the top stretcher bar an inscription in pencil reads: 'Frøken Hammershøi' Also on the top bar is an exhibition label: 'Exposition Universelle de Paris 1889. Beaux-Arts Danois. No. 47'
On the right-hand vertical bar (as viewed from the back) and on the left-hand end of the crossbar are labels - either transport or exhibition related - signed 'V. Hammershøi'. Traces of removed labels are found on the cross bar and on the right-hand vertical bar.
Stretching
Ground layer
The ground layer is a preparatory layer applied directly to the support to create a smooth surface for painting. It is typically opaque and monochrome in color, providing a neutral base that influences the subsequent application of paint layers and the final appearance of the painting. The composition of the ground layer varies depending on the type of support and the historical period of the artwork. Hammershøi typically painted on white and industrially primed canvasses.
Underdrawing
The underdrawing is a preliminary sketch applied directly onto the ground layer, serving as an outline for the composition or parts of it before the paint layers are added. These drawings are often not visible to the naked eye but can be revealed through infrared imaging (IRR and IR-R-IR) if carried out with a carbon-containing material on a light-coloured ground layer. The underdrawings can offer valuable insight into the artist’s creative process and planning, showing how the composition evolved prior to the final painting.
No underdrawing is visible to the naked eye.
Underpainting
The underpainting is an initial layer of paint applied between the underdrawing and the final paint layers, serving as a foundation for the subsequent application of color. It is often executed in a monochrome palette and helps establish the tonal values and final modelling of the composition.
The layer denominated here as underpainting could equally be classified as the initial paint layer in the stratigraphy of the modelling from dark to light.
Paint layer
Paint layers are applied over the ground layer and are composed of pigments or colorants mixed with a binding medium. Throughout history, artists have used various binders. In the Middle Ages, egg yolk was commonly used in tempera painting for altar pieces, while during the Renaissance, oil became the preferred medium. In modern times, synthetic binders such as those found in acrylic paints are also widely used. In Hammershøi’s time, artists painted mainly with oil paint. The paint layer forms the visible image of the artwork and is often built up in multiple layers to create effects of color, texture, depth, and transparency.
A generally thick paint layer, in places evidently multi-layered but with a moderate impasto.
The general sequence of the modeling is from dark to light. This is partly evident in the drapery on the bed, but is also apparent in several places between brush strokes in the torso and the yellow wall where the darker initial layers are seen underneath. The brushwork in the lighter, more discernible parts of the composition is generally more open in character, thereby making optical use of the colour and tonality of the darker underpaint. The drapery on the left side of the bed has a simple structure with the colour of the underpaint used as a mid-tone upon which a few brush strokes of lighter and darker paint, respectively, were applied to model the folds of the fabric. The direction of the brush strokes in part follows the shapes, for instance in the modelling of the figure and the drapery, but apart from this no direction predominates. Generally, the application of the individual paint layers appears to be wet-in-wet with brush strokes of various tones more or less blended. However, this does not seem to apply in the same degree to the approach in the stepwise build-up of layers.
Varnish
A varnish is sometimes applied as a final transparent layer over the dried paint layer to protect the artwork from dust, dirt, and mechanical damage. In addition to providing protection, varnish saturates the colours and evens out the surface gloss. Over time, this layer may yellow, or degrade. Until the 20th century, it was common practice to varnish oil paintings. In Hammershøi’s time, however, oil paintings were not always varnished, and we know that Hammershøi sometimes deliberately chose to leave his works unvarnished.
Frame
The decorative frame serves both protective and aesthetic purposes and can be original to the artwork or added at a later time. Historical frames may provide valuable information about the artwork’s provenance, often through inscriptions, labels, or stamps found on the reverse side.
There is no surviving frame, although one most likely existed originally, given the exhibition history of the painting. Local marks in the paint surface along the edges supports this assumption.
With multispectral imaging images of an artwork are captured at different wavelength bands across the electromagnetic spectrum – such as ultraviolet, visible, and infrared light, as well as x-rays. Each band can reveal specific features and uncover or enhance details invisible to the naked eye, offering valuable insights into an artwork – such as the materials used, the presence of underdrawings and hidden layers, alterations made by the artist, and traces of past conservation treatments.
Multispectral imaging
Click on one of the images below to explore the painting by comparing different image types with an advanced image viewer. To ensure accurate visual comparison within the viewer, a precise image registration has been performed. If the images below look slightly distorted, this is caused by the image registration proces that ensures precise comparability in the viewer.
Weave maps
Weave maps are detailed visualisations of the thread patterns in a canvas, created by applying thread counting on high-resolution x-radiographs. These are used for analysing the structure of the canvas and to compare canvases used in different paintings. A comparison between weave maps can sometimes determine if two or more pieces of canvas derive from the same batch and thereby shed light on the place and period in which a painting has been created.
A comprehensive understanding of the materials and techniques used in a painting typically requires the combined application of several analytical methods. Material analysis can provide valuable information about the pigments, colourants, and binding media used in an artwork. Some techniques are non-invasive, i.e. they do not require physical contact with the artwork, while others involve removing a small sample. Elemental analysis using MA-XRF identified pigments, while SEM-EDXS offered insights into the paintings’ ground layers. In selected cases, FORS and FTIR were also employed to identify organic compounds.
FTIR
FTIR is an analytical technique commonly used to identify organic compounds based on their characteristic absorption of infrared radiation. It is particularly useful for the analysis of varnishes, binding media and degradation products present within the layers of a painting.
Optical microscopy
Optical microscopy uses visible light and lenses to magnify and examine the surface and structure of a painting. When applied to cross sections of paint samples, it allows for detailed observation of a painting’s stratigraphy (layer structure) and pigment particles. It is often employed with various illumination techniques, such as dark field and UV fluorescence, to enhance the analysis. Layer number 1 in the results section below the images refers to the layer at the bottom of the cross section.
SEM-EDXS
SEM-EDXS is a technique that provides highly detailed images at the microscopic level while simultaneously identifying the elemental composition of a sample. It is particularly valuable for studying the stratigraphy of paint cross sections at very fine scales, for the chemical characterisation of pigments, fillers and degradation products, and for detecting trace elements that may indicate very specific materials. Below, the elements listed in parentheses refer to minor elements whose relative abundance is below 10% of the total signal. The F1 map below represents the Pb M line. Read more under SEM-EDXS in the glossary.
Results
This section presents comments and notes concerning the art historical context of the painting, including its provenance and its relationship with other works by Hammershøi based on their history and motifs. Combined with technical analysis, this contextual approach can inspire further research into groups of paintings that may be connected by time, place, composition, or materials.
Description from the Bramsen catalogue
In Bramsen (1918) the painting is described as follows: JOB. Billedet er gaaet til Grunde. I det usikre Lys fra en Tællepraas sad en nøgen Mand paa sin fattige Seng ret op og ned som en ægyptisk Statue. Hovedet, hvis Øjne var lukkede, og hvis hverdagslige Træk kun skimtedes svagt, rejst lidt tilbage; den ene — for luffelignende —
Haand, hævet i uvilkaarlig Bevægelse af usigelig Vaande.
(Transl): JOB. The painting is destroyed. In the unsteady light from a dip a naked man was sitting on his poor bed, straight up and down like an Egyptian statue. The head, with its eyes closed and whose ordinary features were only seen dimly, raised slightly towards the back; one hand – too much like a mitten – raised in an involuntary gesture of unspeakable agony.
Conservation documentation
According to Poul Vad (1988) p. 39-40 attempts were made in the 1940s to recover by restoration some of the lost tonality of the painting, but with little success.
References, sources and notes
The painting is mentioned in the artist’s mother Frederikke Hammershøi's scrapbook no.1 from the period (The Hirschsprung Collection archive). She writes: "Job":"Anmærkning. Vilhelm har aldrig tænkt at det skulle være et bibelsk Billede; men da det skulle have et Navn i Katalogen valgte han navnet "Job" som den bedste Betegnelse for et lidende Menneske/"Job" Note. Vilhelm never meant this to be a biblical image, but as it should have a title for the catalogue he chose the name "Job" as the best term describing a suffering human being." According to Frederikke Hammershøi the artist worked on the painting for 1½ year. The process around the creation of the painting is described for instance in the artist and colleague J.F. Willumsen’s memoirs (the J.F. Willumsen Museum archive) in the following way: "Saa forsvandt han fra Skolerne og holdt sig indelukket paa et atelier for at finde sig selv, som han sagde; det ville sige: sin egen Stil…/ Then he disappeared from the school and kept himself locked up in a studio, to find himself as he said; that meant: to find his own style…" Further information about the painting and the related sketches can be found here: webpage: arkiv.hirschsprung.dk/ Hammershøis dunkle mesterværk and Hvidt and Oelsner, 2018, page 170-177 + the article by Camilla Klitgaard Laursen, "Som et suk i natten. Vilhelm Hammershøis mørke mesterværk" in Periskop nr. 25, 2021 p. 120-137. Concerning the composition with the sitting figure turned to the side please note the similarity with the pose in the painting "Portrait of a Young Girl", survey 28.
Provenance
Bequest to the the Hirschsprung Collection 1956 from the estate of Anna Hammershøi.
In the article by Camilla Klitgaard Laursen, "Som et suk i natten. Vilhelm Hammershøis mørke mesterværk" in Periskop nr. 25, 2021 p. 120-137, new information is revealed about the provenance of the painting which was also at some point in the collection of Wilhelm and Henny Hansen at Ordrupgaard.
Comments
In Bramsen (1918), the painting is classified as 'perished'. The term in this case probably meant that it had been ruined by the darkening of the paint rather than having been actively destroyed. However, in the cataloque of the posthumous exhibition of Hammershøi's works at the Copenhagen Art Association ('Kunstforeningen') in April 1916 a drawing in charcoal on paper (p. 7, no. 44) is classified as a cartoon for the 'no longer existing' painting.
Images/Files
All images and files related to this painting are listed below. You may choose to download the complete set or select specific items as needed.
Support
Ground layer
Multispectral imaging
Weave maps
FTIR
Optical microscopy
SEM-EDXS
Do you have a question about this artwork, or additional information to share? Please send an email to vihda@smk.dk