Jan Nagel (painter) explained

Jan Nagel (in Dutch; Flemish pronounced as /jɑn ˈnaːɣəl/; c. 1560–1602) was a Dutch Renaissance painter.

Biography

Nagel was born in Haarlem. Houbraken mentions him only as the teacher of Claes Jacobsz van der Heck.[1]

According to Karel van Mander, who also mentions him on the last page of his Schilder-boeck as the teacher of Claes Jacobsz van der Heck, he was a follower of the Antwerp painter Cornelis Molenaer, as good as he was at landscape painting, but better at portraits, from either Haarlem or Alkmaar, who died at the Hague in 1602. He spelled his name Ian Nagel or Naghel.[2]

According to the RKD his daughter Neeltge married the painter Sijbert Cornelisz Moninckx, father of Pieter Moninckx, and he became a member of the Guild of Saint Luke in the Hague in 1600, where he later died.[3]

According to the archives of the Haarlem chamber of rhetoric called Trouw moet Blycken, he was a member ("camerist") who painted their oldest achievement of arms from 1593.[4] He died in The Hague.

References

Notes and References

  1. Jan Nagel Biography in De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen (1718) by Arnold Houbraken, courtesy of the Digital Library for Dutch Literature
  2. Ian Nagel in Cornelis Molenaer biography in Karel van Mander's Schilderboeck, 1604, courtesy of the Digital Library for Dutch Literature
  3. Jan Nagel in the RKD
  4. http://www.troumoetblycken.nl/pdf/LENNEP1922.pdf Inventory by Jhr. O. van Lennep