Background
He was born in 1818 in Utrecht to Dirk Christiaan Suermondt and Elizabeth Twist.
He was born in 1818 in Utrecht to Dirk Christiaan Suermondt and Elizabeth Twist.
In the 1830s he worked with the Cockerill-Sambre steel manufacturers in Seraing, Belgium. Coming from French extraction, Suermondt was responsible for attracting French investment into Germany during the 1830s-40s. At that time he founded in Germany a steel company that after a number of name changes in 1870 became known as Rheinische Stahlwerks, where he served as president until 1878.
The couple had six sons.
He was a major collector of Netherlandish and Dutch Golden Age painting, and acquired works by, amongst others, January van Eyck, January Vermeer, Frans Hals, Hans Holbein the Younger, Peter Paul Rubens and January Steen. In 1874 a large part of the Suermondt collection was passed to the Gemäldegalerie, Berlin, a purchase headed by Julius Meyer and art historian Wilhelm von Bode funded by a grant of £50,000.
The sale of his art collected came when his company experienced a rapid collapse. Another portion of his collection, amounting to 105 paintings, was bequeathed to the city of Aachen in 1882, and was instrumental in building up the display of the Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum.
That year Suermondt was made an honorary citizen of the city of Aachen.
Around 1850, he had been portrayed in three-quarter view by Ludwig Knaus. Today the work hangs in the foyer of the Suermondt-Ludwig.