Jump to content

Ferdinand de Braekeleer the Elder: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Life: clean up, typo(s) fixed: 1828-1857 → 1828–1857 (3)
 
(24 intermediate revisions by 17 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|Flemish painter}}
[[File:Ferdinand Sr. De Braekeleer.jpg|thumb|Self-portrait (1854)]]
[[File:Ferdinand Sr. De Braekeleer.jpg|thumb|''Self-portrait'' (1854)]]
[[File:Ferdinand de Braekeleer (1792-1883), Kenau Simonsdr. Hasselaar tijdens het belg van Haarlem, 1829, Olievrf op doek.JPG|thumb|300px|[[Kenau Simonsdr. Hasselaar]] during the siege of [[Haarlem]] by Ferdinand de Braekeleer]]


'''Ferdinand de Braekeleer''' ([[Antwerp]], 12 February 1792 – Antwerp, 16 May 1883), sometimes spelled as '''Ferdinand de Braeckeleer''', was a [[Flanders|Flemish]] painter.<ref name="RKD">[https://rkd.nl/en/explore/artists/20405 Rijksbureau voor Kunsthistorische Documentatie] on de Braekeleer, alternative spelling (Dutch)</ref> He is known for his historical paintings and is called 'the Elder' to distinguish him from his son with the same name ([[Ferdinand de Braekeleer the Younger]]), who was also a painter.
'''Ferdinand de Braekeleer''' ([[Antwerp]], 12 February 1792 – Antwerp, 16 May 1883), sometimes spelled as '''Ferdinand de Braeckeleer''', was a [[Flanders|Flemish]] painter and printmaker.<ref name="RKD">[https://rkd.nl/en/explore/artists/20405 Ferdinand De Braekeleer (I)] at the [[Netherlands Institute for Art History]]</ref> He is known for his paintings of [[Genre painting|genre scenes]], church interiors, [[History painting|historic]] events, religious scenes, cityscapes, market scenes and market still lifes. He is called 'the Elder' to distinguish him from his son with the same name, who was also a painter.<ref name=henri>[https://archive.org/details/ferdinanddebraek00hyma Henri Hymans, ''Ferdinand de Braekeleer, 1792-1883 : notice biographique''], F. Hayez, Brussels, 1884</ref>


== Life ==
== Life ==
Ferdinand was born in a poor family. After his parents died he was admitted to the Art school for orphans of [[Mathieu Ignace van Brée]] in Antwerp.<ref name="GVS">Roeland van Eijnden & Adriaan van der Willigen, [http://www.historici.nl/retroboeken/vaderlandsche_schilderkunst/#source=III&page=392&size=800&accessor=accessor_index Geschiedenis der Vaderlandsche Schilderkunst], Second part p.377 (Dutch)</ref> He continued his education at the [[Royal Academy of Fine Arts (Antwerp)|Royal Academy for Fine Arts of Antwerp]]. His paintings received several prizes in 1809 and 1811. In 1813 he made his reputation at the [[Salon de Paris]] with his work ''Aeneas die Anchises redt uit de brand van Troje'' ("[[Aeneas]] saving [[Anchises]] from the fire of [[Troy]]").{{Citation needed|date=March 2012}} <ref name="Grove">[http://www.answers.com/topic/ferdinand-de-braekeleer-the-elder-1 The Concise Grove Dictionary of Art] via Answers.com</ref>
Ferdinand de Braekeleer was born in a poor family.<ref name="Grove">[https://doi.org/10.1093/gao/9781884446054.article.T021696 Vautier, D, ''De Braekeleer family'']. Grove Art Online. Retrieved 1 May. 2022</ref> After his parents died, he was admitted to the school for orphans and children of poor parents established by the prominent Antwerp painter [[Mattheus Ignatius van Bree]] in Antwerp in 1807. At the school, de Brakeleer received artistic training as well as reading classes. De Bree rewarded good students with money and gifts.<ref name=henri/><ref name="GVS">Roeland van Eijnden & Adriaan van der Willigen, [http://www.historici.nl/retroboeken/vaderlandsche_schilderkunst/#source=III&page=392&size=800&accessor=accessor_index Geschiedenis der Vaderlandsche Schilderkunst], Second part p.377 (Dutch)</ref> De Brakeleer was a good pupil and continued his education at the [[Royal Academy of Fine Arts (Antwerp)|Royal Academy for Fine Arts of Antwerp]] where van Bree was also a teacher. He excelled as a pupil and received several prizes in 1809 and 1811.<ref name=henri/>
[[File:De citadel van Antwerpen kort na het beleg, 19 november-23 december 1832, en de overgave van de Nederlandse bezetting aan de Fransen. Rijksmuseum SK-A-966.jpeg|thumb|310px|left|''The citadel of Antwerp after the bombardment of 1832'']]


In 1813 he submitted his work ''[[Aeneas]] saving [[Anchises]] from the fire of [[Troy]]'' to the Antwerp Salon. It was well received and earned him the prize for painting worth 800 francs.<ref name=henri/> After the establishment of the [[United Kingdom of the Netherlands]], which included the territory of present-day Belgium in 1815, he was initially promised a scholarship to study abroad for three years, which was ultimately not granted. He thus continued his studies in Antwerp and contributed four works to the Antwerp salon of 1816.<ref name=henri/>
Early on, De Braekeleer decided that he wanted to make a living as a painter and he tried out several genres to find out which one would most likely bring him most success. In addition to historical paintings, he also painted religious paintings, such as ''St. Sebastiaan''{{Citation needed|date=March 2012}} for the [[Church of Our Lady of the Vineyard]] in [[Wijnegem]] (current location unknown).<ref name="Grove"/><ref>[http://www.proarts.at/index.php?lang=de&thema=bio&start=144&show=bio_alph&letter=d Ferdinand de Braekeleer on alleskunst.net] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150711080114/http://www.proarts.at/index.php?lang=de&thema=bio&start=144&show=bio_alph&letter=d |date=2015-07-11 }} (German)</ref>


Early on, De Braekeleer decided that he wanted to make a living as a painter and he tried out several genres to find out which one would most likely bring him most success. In addition to historical paintings, he also painted religious paintings, such as ''St. Sebastian'' for the [[Church of Our Lady of the Vineyard]] in [[Wijnegem]] (current location unknown). He contributed some genre paintings of Antwerp city life to the Antwerp salon of 1819.<ref name="Grove"/>
At the Antwerp art exhibition of 1819 he exhibited four paintings,<ref name="GVS"/> of which ''Tobias bezorgt het zicht aan zijn vader terug'' (Tobias Restoring his Father's Sight) won him the [[Prix de Rome (Netherlands)|Dutch Prix de Rome]] in the category of historical paintings. This prize provided him with a scholarship that allowed him to study in Italy to improve his skills. He spent 1821 and 1822 in Italy. Together with his tutor Van Brée (who joined him in Rome) he visited several Italian cities, including [[Naples]], [[Ancona]], [[Firenze]], [[Bologna]] and [[Venice]]. Fascinated by these Italian cities and their landscape, he filled a sketch book with [[crayon]] drawings of landscapes and city views, which is currently on display in the ''Bibliotheque Royale Albert'' (Royal Albert Library) in [[Brussels]].
[[File:De vleermuis, Ferdinand de Braekeleer, 1860, Koninklijk Museum voor Schone Kunsten Gent, 1860-B.jpg|thumb|300px|''The bat'']]


His ''Tobias Restoring his Father's Eye Sight'' won him the [[Prix de Rome (Netherlands)|Dutch Prix de Rome]] in the category of historical paintings in 1819, the year in which the Prix was extended for the first time to the Belgian territory. This prize provided him with a scholarship that allowed him to study in Italy. He left for Rome in December 1819 to further his studies. During his stay in Rome his tutor Van Bree visited him and the pair travelled together to several Italian cities, including [[Naples]], [[Ancona]], [[Firenze]], [[Bologna]] and [[Venice]]. Fascinated by these Italian cities and landscapes, he filled a sketch book with [[crayon]] drawings of landscapes and city views, which is currently in the collection of the [[Royal Library of Belgium]] in [[Brussels]]. By June 1822 he was in Paris from which he sent several of his paintings to Antwerp for the salon of 1822.<ref name=henri/>
After his return to Belgium, De Braekeleer lived in his home town Antwerp. He created works inspired by the old Flemish masters. He primarily focused on historical paintings. One of these is the painting ''De Citadel van Antwerpen na het bombardement van 1832'' (The citadel of Antwerp after the bombardment of 1832). Partially because of his paintings about the [[Siege of Antwerp (1832)|1832 bombardments by the Dutch]], he became an influential artist in Belgium after the independence of Belgium. His two sons, Ferdinand the Younger (1828 - 1857) and [[Henri de Braekeleer]] (1840 - 1888) followed in their father's footsteps and also became painters. His nephew [[Adriaan Ferdinand de Braekeleer]] (1818 - 1904), was also a painter. Besides his sons, he tutored several other painters who became influential, such as [[Jan August Hendrik Leys]] and [[Ernest Slingeneyer]].
[[File:Ferdinand Braekeleer (I) - Trump - NG.M.00487 - National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design.jpg|thumb|300px|left|''Trump'']]


After his return to Antwerp, he created works inspired by the old Flemish masters. He painted many historical paintings depicting his country's glorious past, including scenes from the lives of famous Flemish and Dutch painters such as Rubens and [[Jan Steen]]. In October 1827, he married Marie-Thérèse Leys, the sister of the budding painter [[Jan August Hendrik Leys]] who would study with him. They had eleven children of whom Ferdinand the Younger (1828–1857) and [[Henri de Braekeleer]] (1840–1888) followed in their father's footsteps and became painters. His nephew [[Adriaan Ferdinand de Braekeleer]] (1818–1904) was also a painter. In 1830 Belgium declared its independence, which created another opportunity for De Braekeleer to paint various works on Belgium's past. His ''The citadel of Antwerp after the bombardment of 1832'' about the [[Siege of Antwerp (1832)|1832 bombardments of Antwerp by the Dutch army]] earned him a lot of attention.<ref name=henri/> In 1836 he was appointed the head of the committee responsible for erecting in Antwerp a statue of Rubens. He also supervised the restoration of Rubens' masterpieces the ''Raising of the Cross'' and the ''Deposition'' (both in the [[Cathedral of Our Lady (Antwerp)|Antwerp Cathedral]]).<ref name="Grove"/>
== Pupils<ref name="RKD"/> ==

His reputation continued to grow. At the Brussels Salon of 1836, his ''The Schoolmistress'' won a silver medal, which he refused (although he collected the prize money) because his other contribution to the Salon, a history painting depicting a scene from the [[:File:Ferdinand de Braekeleer (I) - The Spanish Fury in Antwerp.jpg|''Spanish Fury'']] had not been awarded a prize. The success of his [[:File:Ferdinand de Braekeleer (I) - Celebration of the Third Thursday in Lent at the Children's School.jpg|''Celebration of the Third Thursday in Lent at the Children's School'']] and the [[:File:Ferdinand de Braekeleer (I) - The 50th Wedding Anniversary.jpg|''50th Wedding Anniversary'']] (both in the [[Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium]]) at the Brussels Salon of 1839 gained him international recognition. He gained official recognition in Belgium and was made a knight of the [[Order of Leopold (Belgium)|Order of Leopold]]. In 1847, he was appointed to the Royal Academy of Belgium. He was the cofounder of the ''Vereniging van Antwerpse kunstenaars'' (the 'Association of Antwerp artists') together with Henri Leys, [[Gustave Wappers]], [[Nicaise de Keyser]], [[Josephus Laurentius Dyckmans]] and [[Joseph Lies]]. He exhibited again at the Antwerp Salon in 1852. He became a teacher at the Antwerp academy in 1855. In 1861, he was elected an honorary associate of the [[Imperial Academy of Arts]] in [[St. Petersburg]].<ref name=henri/>{{sfn|Belyaev|2018|p=42}}

He became a curator of the [[Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp]] in 1864.<ref name=bm>[https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/term/BIOG20672 Ferdinand de Braekeleer] at the British Museum</ref>
[[File:Ferdinand de Braekeleer (I) - The school master.jpg|thumb|300px|''The school master'']]

Ferdinand de Braekeleer was widowed in 1874 and his health declined rapidly. He managed to handle the brush until the end of his life, leaving unfinished a large painting of the Feast of St. Thomas, a subject he had treated many years before for the Belgian King, but his eye and hand were no longer able to serve his thoughts. Surrounded by his daughters, he died in Antwerp on 16 May 1883, at the age of 91.<ref name=henri/>

==Work==
De Braekeleer is known for his paintings of genre scenes, church interiors, historic events, religious scenes, cityscapes, market scenes and market still lifes. He was also a talented printmaker and etcher who made various prints with genre scenes.<ref name=bm/> He was appreciated for his talents as a colourist and draughtsman. He is particularly remembered for his genre paintings steeped in the spirit of the 17th-century Dutch and Flemish paintings of [[Jan Steen]], van Ostade and [[David Teniers the Younger]]. Although his work was left behind by developments in the second half of the 19th century, he played an important role in reviving Belgian painting through the high quality of his genre works and his role as a teacher of the next generation of artists.<ref name="Grove"/>

== Pupils ==
[[File:Ferdinand de Braekeleer (I) - The Spanish Fury in Antwerp.jpg|thumb|300px|''The Spanish Fury in Antwerp'']]
Besides his sons, he tutored several other artists<ref name="RKD"/> who became influential, including:
{{cols}}
{{cols}}
* [[Louis Antoine Carolus]]
* [[Louis Antoine Carolus]]
Line 19: Line 36:
* [[Adriaan Ferdinand De Braekeleer]]
* [[Adriaan Ferdinand De Braekeleer]]
* [[François Antoine De Bruycker]]
* [[François Antoine De Bruycker]]
* [[Xavier de Cock]]
* [[Xavier De Cock]]
* [[Joseph Dens]]
* [[Joseph Dens]]
* [[Robert van Eijsden]]
* [[Robert van Eijsden]]
Line 32: Line 49:
* [[Jan Baptist Lammens]]
* [[Jan Baptist Lammens]]
* [[Jan August Hendrik Leys]]
* [[Jan August Hendrik Leys]]
* {{ill|Petrus Marius Molijn|nl}}
* [[Petrus Marius Molijn]]
* {{ill|Florent Mols|nl}}
* [[Florent Mols]]
* [[Aimé Pez]]
* [[Aimé Pez]]
* [[Willem Rikkers]]
* [[Willem Rikkers]]
* [[Louis Somers]]
* [[Louis Somers]]
* {{ill|Charles Venneman|nl}}
* [[Charles Venneman]]
* [[Constant Wauters]]
* [[Constant Wauters (painter)|Constant Wauters]]
* {{ill|Pierre Joseph Witdoeck|fr}}
* [[Pierre-Joseph Witdoeck]]
{{colend}}
{{colend}}


== Work ==
== Selected works ==
* ''[[Aeneas]] carrying [[Anchises]] from the fire of [[Troy]]'', 1813
(incomplete overview)<ref name="invaluable">{{cite web|url=http://www.invaluable.com/catalog/searchLots.cfm?scp=m&artistRef=PZAUWG47IC&ord=2&ad=DESC&alF=1 |title=Overview of a part of his work on |publisher=Invaluable.com |date= |accessdate=2013-06-24}}</ref>
* ''The Healing of Tobit'', 1819; current location unknown
* ''Aeneas die Anchises redt uit de brand van Troje'' ("[[Aeneas]] carrying [[Anchises]] from the fire of [[Troy]]"), 1813
* ''St. Sebastian'';<ref name="Grove"/> current location unknown
* ''Tobias bezorgt het zicht aan zijn vader terug'' (Tobias Restoring his Father's Sight), 1819; unknown current location
* ''St.Sebastiaan'';<ref name="Grove"/> unknown current location
* ''Courtship'', current location unknown
* ''Oestereters'' (Eating oysters), 1829; collection gemeentemuseum?<ref>[https://rkd.nl/en/explore/images/216455 Oestereters] at RKD</ref>
* ''The Oyster Eaters'', 1829; current location unknown<ref>[https://rkd.nl/en/explore/images/216455 Oestereters] at the [[Netherlands Institute for Art History]]</ref>
* ''De Citadel van Antwerpen na het bombardement van 1832'' (The citadel of Antwerp after the bombardment of 1832); on display in [[Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Antwerp]]
* ''The citadel of Antwerp after the bombardment of 1832''; [[Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Antwerp]]
* ''Herbergscène met muzikanten'' (Tavern scene with musicians), 1843 based on work by [[Adriaen van Ostade]]<ref>[https://rkd.nl/en/explore/images/114832 Herbergscène met muzikanten] at RKD</ref>
* ''Tavern scene with musicians'', 1843 based on a work by [[Adriaen van Ostade]]<ref>[https://rkd.nl/en/explore/images/114832 Herbergscène met muzikanten] at the [[Netherlands Institute for Art History]]</ref>
* ''Beleg van Haarlem'' (Siege of Haarlem); on display in [[Teylers Museum]]
* ''The Siege of Haarlem''; [[Teylers Museum]]
* ''Interieur met boeren'' (Farmhouse with peasants), drawing. On display in [[Schlossmuseum Weimar]]<ref>[https://rkd.nl/en/explore/images/187057 Interieur met boeren] at RKD</ref>
* ''Farmhouse with peasants'', drawing. [[Schlossmuseum Weimar]]<ref>[https://rkd.nl/en/explore/images/187057 Interieur met boeren] at the [[Netherlands Institute for Art History]]</ref>
* ''Oude jager met jong meisje'' (Old hunter with young woman), 1867; private collection<ref>[https://rkd.nl/en/explore/images/187057 Oude jager met jong meisje] at RKD</ref>
* ''Old hunter with young woman'', 1867; private collection<ref>[https://rkd.nl/en/explore/images/187057 Oude jager met jong meisje] at the [[Netherlands Institute for Art History]]</ref>

==Bibliography==
* P. & V. Berko, "Dictionary of Belgian painters born between 1750 & 1875", Knokke 1981, p. 152-155.
* P. & V. Berko, "19th Century European Virtuoso Painters", Knokke 2011, p. 498, illustrations p. 442.


== References ==
== References ==
{{Commonscat}}
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}


== Literature ==
{{Authority control}}
*{{cite book
{{DEFAULTSORT:Braekeleer, Ferdinand, The Elder}}
|last=Belyaev
|first=N. S.
|year=2018
|title=Honorary Free Associates of the Imperial Academy of Arts. Brief biographical guide
|url=http://pushkinskijdom.ru/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Belyaev-Volnye-obshhniki-s-zamenoj-nemetskogo.pdf
|location=St Petersburg
|publisher=Russian Academy of Sciences
|page= 28
|isbn=978-5-336-00234-8
}}

==External links==
*{{Commons-inline}}
{{Authority control (arts)}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Braekeleer, Ferdinand 1}}
[[Category:1792 births]]
[[Category:1792 births]]
[[Category:1883 deaths]]
[[Category:1883 deaths]]
[[Category:People from Antwerp]]
[[Category:Painters from Antwerp]]
[[Category:Belgian painters]]
[[Category:Belgian painters]]
[[Category:Belgian printmakers]]
[[Category:Belgian etchers]]
[[Category:Royal Academy of Fine Arts (Antwerp) alumni]]
[[Category:Royal Academy of Fine Arts (Antwerp) alumni]]
[[Category:Prix de Rome (Netherlands) winners]]
[[Category:Prix de Rome (Netherlands) winners]]

Latest revision as of 06:36, 10 October 2024

Self-portrait (1854)

Ferdinand de Braekeleer (Antwerp, 12 February 1792 – Antwerp, 16 May 1883), sometimes spelled as Ferdinand de Braeckeleer, was a Flemish painter and printmaker.[1] He is known for his paintings of genre scenes, church interiors, historic events, religious scenes, cityscapes, market scenes and market still lifes. He is called 'the Elder' to distinguish him from his son with the same name, who was also a painter.[2]

Life

[edit]

Ferdinand de Braekeleer was born in a poor family.[3] After his parents died, he was admitted to the school for orphans and children of poor parents established by the prominent Antwerp painter Mattheus Ignatius van Bree in Antwerp in 1807. At the school, de Brakeleer received artistic training as well as reading classes. De Bree rewarded good students with money and gifts.[2][4] De Brakeleer was a good pupil and continued his education at the Royal Academy for Fine Arts of Antwerp where van Bree was also a teacher. He excelled as a pupil and received several prizes in 1809 and 1811.[2]

The citadel of Antwerp after the bombardment of 1832

In 1813 he submitted his work Aeneas saving Anchises from the fire of Troy to the Antwerp Salon. It was well received and earned him the prize for painting worth 800 francs.[2] After the establishment of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands, which included the territory of present-day Belgium in 1815, he was initially promised a scholarship to study abroad for three years, which was ultimately not granted. He thus continued his studies in Antwerp and contributed four works to the Antwerp salon of 1816.[2]

Early on, De Braekeleer decided that he wanted to make a living as a painter and he tried out several genres to find out which one would most likely bring him most success. In addition to historical paintings, he also painted religious paintings, such as St. Sebastian for the Church of Our Lady of the Vineyard in Wijnegem (current location unknown). He contributed some genre paintings of Antwerp city life to the Antwerp salon of 1819.[3]

The bat

His Tobias Restoring his Father's Eye Sight won him the Dutch Prix de Rome in the category of historical paintings in 1819, the year in which the Prix was extended for the first time to the Belgian territory. This prize provided him with a scholarship that allowed him to study in Italy. He left for Rome in December 1819 to further his studies. During his stay in Rome his tutor Van Bree visited him and the pair travelled together to several Italian cities, including Naples, Ancona, Firenze, Bologna and Venice. Fascinated by these Italian cities and landscapes, he filled a sketch book with crayon drawings of landscapes and city views, which is currently in the collection of the Royal Library of Belgium in Brussels. By June 1822 he was in Paris from which he sent several of his paintings to Antwerp for the salon of 1822.[2]

Trump

After his return to Antwerp, he created works inspired by the old Flemish masters. He painted many historical paintings depicting his country's glorious past, including scenes from the lives of famous Flemish and Dutch painters such as Rubens and Jan Steen. In October 1827, he married Marie-Thérèse Leys, the sister of the budding painter Jan August Hendrik Leys who would study with him. They had eleven children of whom Ferdinand the Younger (1828–1857) and Henri de Braekeleer (1840–1888) followed in their father's footsteps and became painters. His nephew Adriaan Ferdinand de Braekeleer (1818–1904) was also a painter. In 1830 Belgium declared its independence, which created another opportunity for De Braekeleer to paint various works on Belgium's past. His The citadel of Antwerp after the bombardment of 1832 about the 1832 bombardments of Antwerp by the Dutch army earned him a lot of attention.[2] In 1836 he was appointed the head of the committee responsible for erecting in Antwerp a statue of Rubens. He also supervised the restoration of Rubens' masterpieces the Raising of the Cross and the Deposition (both in the Antwerp Cathedral).[3]

His reputation continued to grow. At the Brussels Salon of 1836, his The Schoolmistress won a silver medal, which he refused (although he collected the prize money) because his other contribution to the Salon, a history painting depicting a scene from the Spanish Fury had not been awarded a prize. The success of his Celebration of the Third Thursday in Lent at the Children's School and the 50th Wedding Anniversary (both in the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium) at the Brussels Salon of 1839 gained him international recognition. He gained official recognition in Belgium and was made a knight of the Order of Leopold. In 1847, he was appointed to the Royal Academy of Belgium. He was the cofounder of the Vereniging van Antwerpse kunstenaars (the 'Association of Antwerp artists') together with Henri Leys, Gustave Wappers, Nicaise de Keyser, Josephus Laurentius Dyckmans and Joseph Lies. He exhibited again at the Antwerp Salon in 1852. He became a teacher at the Antwerp academy in 1855. In 1861, he was elected an honorary associate of the Imperial Academy of Arts in St. Petersburg.[2][5]

He became a curator of the Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp in 1864.[6]

The school master

Ferdinand de Braekeleer was widowed in 1874 and his health declined rapidly. He managed to handle the brush until the end of his life, leaving unfinished a large painting of the Feast of St. Thomas, a subject he had treated many years before for the Belgian King, but his eye and hand were no longer able to serve his thoughts. Surrounded by his daughters, he died in Antwerp on 16 May 1883, at the age of 91.[2]

Work

[edit]

De Braekeleer is known for his paintings of genre scenes, church interiors, historic events, religious scenes, cityscapes, market scenes and market still lifes. He was also a talented printmaker and etcher who made various prints with genre scenes.[6] He was appreciated for his talents as a colourist and draughtsman. He is particularly remembered for his genre paintings steeped in the spirit of the 17th-century Dutch and Flemish paintings of Jan Steen, van Ostade and David Teniers the Younger. Although his work was left behind by developments in the second half of the 19th century, he played an important role in reviving Belgian painting through the high quality of his genre works and his role as a teacher of the next generation of artists.[3]

Pupils

[edit]
The Spanish Fury in Antwerp

Besides his sons, he tutored several other artists[1] who became influential, including:

Selected works

[edit]

References

[edit]

Literature

[edit]
  • Belyaev, N. S. (2018). Honorary Free Associates of the Imperial Academy of Arts. Brief biographical guide (PDF). St Petersburg: Russian Academy of Sciences. p. 28. ISBN 978-5-336-00234-8.
[edit]