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In 1945, Sturla Gudlaugsson, a specialist in Dutch seventeenth-century painting and iconography and Director of the Netherlands Institute for Art History and the Mauritshuis in The Hague, wrote The Comedians in the work of Jan Steen and his Contemporaries, which revealed that a major influence on Jan Steen's work was the guild of the Rhetoricians or Rederijkers and their theatrical endeavors.
He gave this painting in turn to the English Ambassador, who presented it to James I. This was the reason why in 1631, when Lievens was 24, he was invited to the British court. [ 1 ] Houbraken appears to have taken this account directly from Jan Orlers' Beschrijvinge der Stad Leyden (1641) which gives a life of Jan Lievens in pages 375-7 ...
He travelled back to Naples in 1617 to move his household permanently to Leiden. [1] On 6 January 1618 the artist along with his wife and three surviving children arrived in Leiden. Here van Swanenburg achieved success as a painter and received commissions from local and non-local patrons. [5] He was registered as a master of the young ...
About Wikipedia; Contact us; Contribute Help; ... Painters from Leiden (76 P) Pages in category "Artists from Leiden"
Gelder, Nicolaes van (Leiden c. 1636 – Amsterdam 1677) Gherwen, Reynier van (Leiden c. 1620 – Leiden 1662) Gheyn, Jacques de (II) (Antwerp 1565 – The Hague 1629) Gheyn, Jacques de (III) (Haarlem or Leiden 1596 – Utrecht 1641) Gillig, Jacob (Utrecht c. 1636 – Utrecht 1701) Gillis, Nicolaes (Antwerp 1592/93 – Haarlem aft. 1632)
Jan Adriaensz. van Staveren (1614 in Leiden – 1669 in Leiden), was a Dutch Golden Age painter of the Leiden school of fijnschilders. According to the RKD he was fourteen when he entered his name in 1628 in the Leiden University Album Studiosorum , and he paid dues to the Leiden Guild of St. Luke in the years 1644–1669. [ 1 ]
Man Writing a Letter (1662–1665) (National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin). Gabriel Metsu was the son of Jacques Metsu (c. 1588 – March 1629), a tapestry worker and painter originally from Hainault, who lived most of his days at Leiden, [2] and Jacquemijntje Garniers (c. 1590 – 8 September 1651), the widow of a painter with three children of her own.