Abraham de Verwer

Dutch painter
Battle of the Zuider Zee, October 6, 1573

Abraham de Verwer (1585, Haarlem – 19 August 1650 (buried), Amsterdam), was a Dutch Golden Age painter of cityscapes, (river) landscapes and seascapes.

Biography

He was also called Abraham de Verweer van Burghstrate.[1][2]

It is unknown who taught him to paint, but he was noted in his wife's testament in Haarlem in 1607 as a "schrijnwerker" or cabinet-maker, and in 1614 he was noted in an Amsterdam estate inventory as a painter.[1]

He travelled in France from 1637 to 1639,[1] and seven views along the Seine in Paris are known, as well as three more at the Musée Carnavalet and one at the Institut Néerlandais, Paris.[1] Frederick Henry, Prince of Orange, was a client who purchased two cityscapes of the Louvre and two other paintings for 400 guilders in 1639.[1][3] Verwer returned to Amsterdam, where he obtained citizenship on 23 January 1641, and bought a house on Prinsengracht in 1642.[1]

He was the father of the Amsterdam poet Catharina Verwers and the Amsterdam painter Justus de Verwer.[1][4]

He was buried in the Oude Kerk, Amsterdam.[1][2]

  • Two views of Paris in about 1640 (Musée Carnavalet)
  • The Grande Galerie of the Louvre
    The Grande Galerie of the Louvre
  • The Hôtel de Nevers (left bank) and the Tour de Nesle
    The Hôtel de Nevers (left bank) and the Tour de Nesle

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Abraham de Verwer.
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Abraham de Verwer in the RKD
  2. ^ a b "Verwer, Abraham de", vol. 14, pp. 245–246, in Benezit Dictionary of Artists (Paris: Gründ, 2006).
  3. ^ Benezit says he worked for Prince Frederick Henry of Nassau.
  4. ^ Catharina Verwers in inghist
  • Abraham de Verwer on Artnet
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