Benjamin Patersen
Benjamin Patersen, or Patersson (Russian: Бенжамен Патерсен; 2 September 1748/50, in Varberg 1815, in Saint Petersburg) was a Swedish-born Russian painter and engraver; known primarily for his cityscapes.[1][2]
Biography
Benjamin Patersen was born in Varberg to a family of customs clerk.[3] Little known of his early years and childhood. He studied Art in Göteborg from Simon Fick and soon became a member of local Art Society. In the late 1770s he travelled to Poland, Latvia and Lithuania. From 1774 to 1786 he resided and worked in Riga.[1]
In 1787 Patersen came to St Petersburg. According to his ad, given in the ‘Sankt-Peterburgskie Vedomosti’ newspaper on the 22 of January, 1787, he stayed in house No. 154 near the Blue Bridge. Patersen got married in 1791 and baptized his daughter in 1795 in the Church of Saint Catherine.[2]
He never lost touch with Sweden, it is known that he visited the homeland in 1806. Since 1790 he sent his works to the annual exhibitions at the Royal Swedish Academy of Arts, in 1798, he was named its member.[2]
In the mid 1790s Patersen was given the first contract by the Royal Court. Soon, he was appointed to a court painter position.[2]
Selected works
-
Neva Gate,
Peter and Paul Fortress
References
- ^ a b Komelova 1984.
- ^ a b c d Bengt 2010.
- ^ Brook, Iovleva 1998, p. 182.
Sources
- Komelova, G. N. (1984). Петербург конца XVIII – начала XIX века в акварелях и гравюрах Бенжамена Патерсена [Petersburg of the XVIII – XIX Centuries in Watercolours and Engravings by Benjamin Patersen] (in Russian). Moscow: ‘Izobrazitelynoe Iskusstvo’ Publishing House.
- Bengt, Jangfeldt (2010). От варягов до Нобеля. Шведы на берегах Невы [Since the Varangians to Nobel: the Swedes on the Banks of Neva] (in Russian). Moscow: ‘Lomonosov’ Publishing House. p. 392. ISBN 978-591678-041-3.
- Brook, J. V.; Iovleva, L. I. (1998). Государственная Третьяковская галерея: Живопись XVIII-XX веков [The State Tretyakov Gallery: Painting of the XVIII-XX Centuries] (in Russian). Moscow: ‘Krasnaya Ploshad’. ISBN 5-900743-40-3.
External links
Media related to Benjamin Patersen at Wikimedia Commons