Career
Details about his life are scarce. He trained probably until 1672 in Amersfoort under the still life and cityscape painter Matthias Withoos, who had previously lived and worked in Rome. He was active in Amersfoort until 1674, the year in which he left for Italy together with Caspar van Wittel, another pupil of Withoos.
He is documented in Rome on 3 January 1675.
lieutenant was customary for the Bentvueghels to adopt an appealing nickname, the so-called "bent name". Jacob van Staverden was given the bent name Ijver (diligence).
He also became close to the ‘Bamboccianti’, a loose group of principally Dutch and Flemish genre painters residing in Rome who took the everyday life of the lower classes in Rome and its countryside as the preferred subject of their paintings. In March 1686 and January 1687 he is documented back in Amersfoort.
He left again for Rome where he resided from 1689 until his death.
In Rome he is recorded as living with Caspar Van Wittel in 1689 and in 1693-1694. He entered the service of the Papal Guard in Rome in 1694. According to the early Dutch biographer January van Gool the reason for this was that he was not very successful as an artist in Rome.
Van Gool also maliciously states that van Staverden was passing himself off as a nobleman in Rome while in fact his father was "only a common craftsman".
Jacob van Staverden’s name appears in various documents dated 1706, 1710 and 1712 and 1716 relating to the sale of assets to raise money. His profession is not mentioned in these records.