Pieter van der Werff explained

Pieter van der Werff
Birth Date:1665
Birth Place:Kralingen, Dutch Republic (modern-day Netherlands)
Death Place:Rotterdam, Dutch Republic (modern-day Netherlands)
Nationality:Dutch
Field:Painting
Movement:Baroque

Pieter van der Werff (1665  - 26 September 1722) was a Dutch Golden Age painter. He assisted his older brother, Adriaen van der Werff.

Life

He learned to paint from his brother Adriaen and according to the RKD, he spent most of his life working in Rotterdam, where he painted the rich and famous.[1] There is possible evidence he might have travelled to England to seek commissions as two portraits painted c.1709 of an unknown gentleman and unknown woman hang in the Victoria Art Gallery Bath, their alternative titles being John Churchill, First Duke of Marlborough and Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough.[2] Whilst in England he may have had commissions from the Fairfax family – a long established Yorkshire Catholic family who owned extensive land and property in the county.[3] Pieter was also the first recorded painter to use the pigment Prussian blue, with the earliest usage through painting a copy of his brother's painting The Entombment of Christ in 1709, using the pigment.[4]

Works

Public Art Galleries and Museums

Some of the artist's paintings feature amongst the following collections:

USA

UK

RUSSIA

FRANCE

NETHERLANDS

DENMARK

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Discover painter Pieter van der Werff . Home . 1992-02-01 . 2023-01-28.
  2. Web site: The National Inventory of Continental European Paintings. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20180930193539/vads.ac.uk/large.php?uid=83494&sos=0. 2018-09-30.
  3. Web site: Van der Werff, Pieter, 1665–1722 | Art UK.
  4. https://www.ndt.net/article/art2008/papers/029bartoll.pdf
  5. Mr Bridgman's Accomplice: Long Ben's Coxwain 1660-1720, 2019, John Dann, ISBN 978-178456-636-4
  6. Web site: Pieter van der Werff.