Henry Scheemakers (birth name: Hendrik Scheemaekers) (Flanders c.1686 - Paris, 18 July 1748) was a Flemish-born sculptor who worked in England and France in the first half of the 18th century.[1]
Henry was elder brother to the better known (in England) Peter Scheemakers the Younger, with whom he collaborated on some projects. Henry's younger son Thomas-Henry took on his uncle Peter the Younger's workshop in Vine Street after Peter retired in the 1770s.[2]
Life
Henry Scheemakers, or Hendrik Scheemaekers in Flemish records, was the eldest son of Antwerp sculptor Pieter Scheemaeckers and his wife Catharina van der Hulst (d.1712).
Birth, Parents and Siblings
His birthdate is unknown but Hendrik Scheemaekers was born around 1686. Hendrik may have been named after the Antwerp sculptor Hendrik Frans Verbrugghen or Verbruggen, who had married Susanna Verhulst in 1682. [3] Henry's younger siblings were Catharina baptised 1 October 1688 (died young), Pieter-Caspar baptised 10 January 1691, Elisabeth baptised 6 July 1693 (still living in 1771), Jan-Frans baptised 2 February 1696 (ditto), and another Catharina baptised 20 March 1698 (died before 1771 leaving one daughter), all at the St Jacobskerk in Antwerp. His parents' marriage had ended in an acrimonious divorce in 1707. Testimony by multiple witnesses during the divorce procedure of 2 July 1708 attested to the awful behaviour of the father Pieter, who mistreated and beat his wife and children calling them 'pigs' and flew into drunken rages during which he destroyed their home.[4]
Henry Scheemakers initially learned his art from his father, but is said by French sources [8] to have gone to Copenhagen as a journeyman to his near-contemporary Johann Adam Sturmberg, where his younger brother Peter Scheemakers the younger later joined him c.1718-1720.
The London Years
Brother Peter Scheemakers had arrived in England by around 1720, going into loose partnership with Gent-born sculptor Laurent Delvaux, especially following the early death of Antwerp-born Pierre-Denis Plumier around mid-1721. The year of Henry's arrival in London is less clear. He was established as a sculptor by 1726, when "Hen. Scheemakers, Statuary" of St Margaret's Westminster took on apprentice John van Nost the younger, nephew (but entered as son) of the Flemish sculptor Jan van Nost, [9][10] Henry being of the parish of St Margaret's Westminster, and John of St George Hanover Square. In the following year 1727, "Mr Schimacker" first appears in the Westminster Rate Books with address Old Palace Yard in the parish of St Margaret's Westminster. [11]
In the meantime Henry had married Catherine Hennekin at the St James' Royal Catholic Chapel in 1727. [13] Catherine was the daughter of Flemish-born Michiel Hennekin or Michael Hennekin, who had been apprenticed to the great sculptor Jan Claudius de Cock in 1697; Catherine’s brother Simon was a London carver and gilder, as was her nephew George Michael Hennekin. [14] Henry and Catherine Scheemaker's son Michael, named after her father, and daughter Catherine both died young and were buried at St Margaret's Westminster in 1731 and 1734 respectively, but the couple had four surviving children who were named as Henry's heirs in Paris after he died there in July 1748 : Peter, Thomas-Henry, Marie-Louise, Geneviève-Catherine. [15]
Paris
Before moving to Paris, Henry Scheemakers held an auction in July 1733 of some of his stock, but the family was still in London in September 1734 when his daughter Catherine was buried at St Margaret's Westminster. [16]
Despite being resident and working in Paris for almost 15 years, very few of Henry Scheemakers' works in France have been identified with any confidence. The only known items recorded were sculptures of a river and naiads at the Château de Dampierre.[17]
Henry Scheemakers, variously entered in French records as Henri Scheckmackers, Scheekmackers, Shkemacker, and Schektmackers, died on 18 July 1748 on rue Meslé (now Meslay) in Paris, age approximately 65 years old, at 2 am after about two weeks' illness.[18] As Henry's children were underage, their mother Catherine Hennekin was appointed their main guardian. [19]
The inventory taken of his business stock after death [20] includes "60 figures de terre cuite de differentes grandeurs... et differents sujets, une armoire remplie d'outils, deux selles à modeller, un escabel, une table" in a back room on the ground floor, and in the "atelier donnant sur la cour côté rue Meslé... 8 gros vases de pierre de Conflans presque achevés, 4 autre vases non travaillés... modèles en plâtre". The valuation experts were Pierre Danse and Denis Robinot, also sculptors and also resident on rue Meslé. Henry's creditors included Charles Philippe d'Albert de Luynes, Duke and peer of France, who claimed the Enlèvement de Belle Heleinne [sic] par Paris, et Méliagre et Athalas [Atalanta], each 7 foot high. Henry Scheemakers' other creditors included Paul-Ambroise Slodtz (son of sculptor Sébastien Slodtz), sculpteur ordinaire du Roi, living on the rue du Vieux Louvre, who claimed "la moule de torse du Milon de Cretone et le corps en plastre dans ledit moule"; Denis Coulonjon sculpteur à Paris, living at the Cour du Grand Maitre de l'Arsenal, who claimed a terracotta of "Gloire composée de deux tetes de chérubins avec rayons"; Claude-Nicolas Lenoir, marchand de pierre à Conflans-Sainte-Honorine; Pierre Pouillet, tailleur de pierre; Noël Froment, chirurgien du Roi; and the landlord who claimed 200 livres rent for the year.
Sons Pierre and Thomas Scheemakers, sculptors
Henry Scheemakers' elder son Peter (III) Scheemaekers became known in Paris as sculptor Pierre Scheemackers (c.1728-1765). Pierre was admitted to the Academie de St Luc on 15 October 1755, exhibiting several items at the Salons of 1756, 1762 and 1764, and was later appointed Professeur at the Academy in January 1764, but died in Paris on 19 October 1765. [21][22]
Henry Scheemakers' younger son Thomas-Henry, known as Thomas Scheemakers (c.1740-1808) also became a sculptor, arriving in London by 1763 to work for his uncle (not his father, as hitherto mistakenly believed), sculptor Peter Scheemakers who was childless. Thomas took on his uncle's workshop in Vine Street when Peter retired to his native town of Antwerp where he died ten years later in 1781. Thomas had married in London in 1779 but also died childless, leaving an estate worth almost £3,500 and appointing as executors his wife and Joseph Nollekens the sculptor. [23]
^Scheemakers, Peter Gaspar (bap. 1691, d. 1781), sculptor in: Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
^Archives de Paris, Inventaires après décès, AN Y5316, p.155: Henri Schemakers, le 24 septembre 1748, which names his widow and surviving children.
^Henri Scheckmackers, Sculpteur, in Jules Guiffrey, Scellés et inventaires d'artistes français du XVIIème et du XVIIIème siècle, Deuxième Partie 1741-1771, Paris, 1885.
^29 September 1726: "Hen.Scheemakers, St Margt West. Statuary / John son of John Nost of St Geo: Hanov.Square / 7 years / £40", Apprenticeships Books Series IR1, The National Archives.
^Stanislas Lami, Dictionnaire des sculpteurs de l'école française sous le règne de Louis XIV, Paris 1910, p.328.
^Histoire de l'Académie de Saint-Luc, Archives de l'Art Français, Documents Inédits Tome IX, Bulletin de la Société de l'histoire de l'art français, Paris, 1915, p.452.
^Bank of England, Will Extracts: Thomas Scheemaeckers of Vine Street, St James's Middlesex, Register 575, entry number 6220 dated 16 December 1808.