Henri van de Waal


Henri van de Waal was a Dutch writer and art historian known for developing Iconclass.
Van de Waal was born in Rotterdam. In 1934 he finished his education as an art historian in Leiden with a monography on Jan van Goyen. He accepted a position at the National Print Cabinet in The Hague, where he began work on a German concept of image-based historical research, which due to the special circumstances of the interbellum period was drastically reduced. He eventually finished his PhD thesis 12 July 1940, cum laude, on the patriotic subject of Zeventiende eeuwsche uitbeeldingen van den Bataafschen Opstand. Four months later he was dismissed as part of the actions by the German occupational forces against Jews.
Soon after being released from internship in Westerbork in 1945, he took up work as an assistant professor in Leiden, but was appointed a full professorship in art history the same December. In 1946 he presented his ideas about mapping the iconography of art history with "beeld-leer", an image-based concept of recording form, function and content with one code. He remained professor and director of the print cabinet until his death resulting from kidney damage contracted during a case of scarlet fever he had while in Westerbork.
Van de Waal was elected a member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1957.
His "beeld-leer" resulted in the D.I.A.L. based on the Dewey Decimal System, and later called Iconclass.
Henri van de Waal died in Leiden.

Episodes

For an image titled View of the Heiligewegspoort attributed to Lievens, Henri van de Waal had pointed out that its creator could be Jan Andrea Lievens, or the son of the attributed. Werner Sumowski took that suggestion into account and in editing Lievens's catalogue, the picture in question was not included. Among the same collection presently at Leiden University, van de Waal also noted Man arriving in a village, a sheep on his shoulders, Old Testament scene? could be a copy after Van Bronckhorst, which is now attributed to Jan Gerritsz van Bronckhorst.
Van de Waal nominated for an honorary doctorate in arts and philosophy in 1955, as the year fell on the "Rembrandt Year", recognizing Welcker's endeavor and contribution on building a collection of Dutch paintings. Jaap Hillenius exchanged letters with Van de Waal, and one such is among the collection of the Library of Linden University with a drawing of a standing man on the wrong side.

Works

Letters