1829-1912 Related Paintings of william r clark :. | nordenskiolds fartyg vega ger salut,da det rundar asiens nordligaste udde kap tjeljuskin i augusti 1878 | tva officerare fran orlogsfartyget beagle tvingas att dansa for att radda sina liv vid en land stigning pa australiens nordkust 1837-43. | mil efter mil ligger sturoknen ode erbjuder varken landmarken eller skugga mot den brannan de solen | den svenske forskningsresande sven hedin fardades 1000 tals mil genom foga kanda trakter i centralasen mellan 1890 och 1930 talen, fyra av hns humdrat | 1596 seglade hollandaren willem barents till novaja semlja dar hartyg skruvades upp ovanpa packisen | Related Artists:
Hendrick van Anthonissen (29 May 1605, Amsterdam - 12 November 1656, Amsterdam) was a Dutch marine painter.
Van Anthonissen was the son of Aert Anthonisz (a.k.a. Aart van Antum) and painted in the style of his brother-in-law and teacher Jan Porcellis and of Jan van Goyen. He is the author of sea paintings in the Hermitage, St. Petersburg and the Prague Gallery, which through their signatures have been ascribed to a mythical Hendrik van Antem. In the 1630's he lived in The Hague, Leiden, and Leiderdorp, but from 1642 he was back in Amsterdam. He is known for beach scenes and seascapes in the manner of Jan Porcellis, sometimes in grisaille. He was the father of the marine painter Arnoldus van Anthonissen.
POTTER, PaulusDutch Baroque Era Painter, 1625-1654
Son of Pieter Potter. He was related through his mother, Aechtie Pouwels (d 1636), to the wealthy and powerful von Egmont and Semeyns families, who held important offices in Enkhuizen and at the court in The Hague. He worked in his father's studio in Amsterdam during the 1630s and, like him, painted history subjects that show the strong influence of Claes Moeyaert, with whom Paulus may also have studied. In the painting Abraham Returning from Canaan he adapted the landscape setting from an etching by Moses van Uyttenbroeck and the figures from works by Moeyaert from over ten years earlier. Significantly, however, he redistributed the numerous animals and figures that Moeyaert had aligned evenly across the frontal plane; Potter placed them to one side, permitting a view into the deep distance where other animals can be seen. Potter followed his father more than Moeyaert in searching for ways to integrate his figures with the landscape,
Karl Kaspar Pitzpainted Portrait of a cleric a book in his right hand, by a marble bust in before 1795