| | | Famous Dutch Painters from Dordrecht, Ancient Capital of HollandPart 1 Note : Please do not email me with technical questions about paintings and their age and origin because I am not an expert but I only have gathered information about the Painters from the Netherlands and specially from Dordrecht.
Dordrecht is not only known as the oldest city and ancient capital of Holland but also for the many famous painters who were born or lived in Dordrecht during the late Middle ages and later centuries. On the next pages you can find many works from these famous painters who were responsible for many styles of paintings and they immortalized the daily life and landscapes in the 15th to 19th century. Most of their masterpieces are nowadays part of collections in museums all over the world and of which many can be seen in the local Dordrechts Museum.
Bartholomeus Assteyn was the son of a painter from Gent, Abraham Bartholomeusz. In 1631 he became, like his father, a member of the Sint Lucas-guild in Dordrecht. His last painting is dated 1669. Assteyn lived with his family in the Vriesestraat in Dordrecht. In 1677, the year of his dead, an inventory list was made of his belongings and the conclusion can be made that his family was not wealthy. Assteyn was a productive painter who produced many not expensive works.  | Still life with flowers, shells and a pathBartholomeus Assteyn,1631 Oil on panel 43,3 x 34 cm Dordrechts Museum The flowers are all realistic rendered though this combination of flowers are from different seasons (Roses and Tulips). The imperial crown in this still life is really the crown of this composition. This composition and the details are inspired on the work of Johannes Bosschaert. |
Still-LifeBartholomeus Assteyn,1635 Oil on panel 56 x 41 cm Private collection |  |
 | Grapes, peaches on a porcelain plate, with other fruit on a edge, and a large white and a tortoiseshell butterflyBartholomeus Assteyn, 1641 Oil on Panel 59,6 x 84 cm Private collection |
Still life with fruit and flowers in a basketBartholomeus Assteyn, 1629 Oil on Panel 52.5 x 67.5 cm Private collection |  |
 | Still Life of Flowers on a Stone LedgeBartholomeus Assteyn Oil on Panel Private collection |
Corneli Bisschop was a pupil of Ferdinand Bol in Amsterdam. In 1653 he returned to Dordrecht, and became an artist of international allure. In 1674 art biographer Arnold Houbraken mention Bisschop as painter at the royal court of Denmark. The French king Louis XIV was also a client of Bisschop. Many of his paintings re inspired on the work of Nicolaes Maes, Ferdinand Bol and Rembrandt. Self portraitCornelis Bisschop, 1668 Oil on canvas 117 x 98,6 cm Dordrechts Museum On this painting Bisschop enfolds a second painting, an aspect of the 17th century way of painting called 'net-echte' He enfolds a painted curtain in a painting. |  |
 | InteriorCornelis Bisschop, 1660 Oil on panel 58,5 x 74,2 cm Dordrechts Museum In this interior with a young boy by a cradle lies the domestic atmosphere of the 17th century. |
Mercurius and ArgusCornelis Bisschop Oil on canvas 99,4x 126,5 cm Dordrechts Museum Bisschop was probably inspired by a sketch of Gerbrand van den Eeckhout, who, together witch Ferdiand Bol, was a pupil of Renbrandt. They probably med at home by Ferdinand Bol. |  |
,%20with%20a%20portrait%20of%20Cornelis%20de%20Witt.jpg) | Allegory on the Raid on the MedwayCornelis Bisschop, 1668 Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam The trip to Chatham in 1667, with a portrait of Cornelis de Witt. |
Girl peeling an appleCornelis Bisschop, 1667 Oil on panel 70 57 cm Rijksmuseum Amsterdam |  |
 | BathshebaCornelis Bisschop, early 1660s Oil on panel 39.4 x 33.7 cm The Norton Simon museum, Pasadena Originally thought to be by Nicolaes Maes, this painting is now generally attributed to Cornelis Bisschop. Like Maes, Bisschop was born in Dordrecht, and was a versatile practitioner of portraits, history and genre paintings, and it was especially this latter subject where the styles of the two artists intersect. But biblical paintings, such as this one depicting Bathsheba, are typical of Bisschop’s style that emanated from his teacher, Ferdinand Bol (1616–1680), especially seen here in the dramatically lit, smooth skin of her body. The picture tells the story from the second book of Samuel, chapter 11, when king David, standing atop his palace, sees the beautiful Bathsheba bathing at a fountain beyond, and sends a servant with a letter asking her to come to him. |
A Young Woman and a CavalierCornelis Bisschop probably early 1660s Oil on canvas, 97.8 x 88.3 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York The picture is in good condition, although there are many small retouches over the entire surface. The glazes have been abraded in the red bodice of the woman especially, and to some extent in her face; the right contour of her head has been reinforced. The background is somewhat obscured by varnish. |  |
 | A Young Man and a Girl playing CardsCornelis Bisschop Oil on canvas 123,5 x 104 cm National Gallery, London This painting was in England and attributed to Rembrandt as early as 1775. Subsequently it has been thought to be by Nicolas Maes, who was in Rembrandt's studio in the years around 1650. This is not, however, entirely persuasive and, more recently, the work has been attributed to another Dordrecht painter, Cornelis Bisschop (1630 - 1674), who knew Maes's work well and imitated it. However, no signed painting by Bisschop displays the broad handling which is so characteristic of this picture and this interesting attribution must, for the time being, remain speculative. |
Old Woman SleepingCornelis Bisschop Oil on canvas Hamburger Kunsthalle, Hamburg, Germany |  |
 | An infant bacchanalCornelis Bisschop Oil on canvas 83.8 x 65.5 cm Private collection |
Portrait of an old woman reading holding a pearl necklaceCornelis Bisschop, 1650 - 1659 Oil on Canvas 45.1 x 100 cm Private collection |  |
Abraham Bisschop was the youngest son of Cornelis Bisschop (1630-1674), his father died 3 years later. In c. 1700 he moved to Middelburg. He became a painter of scenes with several types of fowls.  | A pair of mute swans in a pond beneath a balustrade, pairAbraham Bisschop, 1722 Oil on canvas 141 x 123 cm Private collection A mute swan preening itself on the edge of a pond, whilst its companion regards a kingfisher perched on a bough. |
Peacocks and other fowl in a garden with a stone urn on a pedestalAbraham Bisschop, 1706 Oil on canvas 158.8 x 146.1 cm Private collection |  |
 | Allegories of autumn and summer, A pairAbraham Bisschop, 1722 Oil on canvas 161 x 236 cm Private collection |
A peacock, poultry and a magpie in a landscapeAbraham Bisschop, 1720 Oil on canvas 89.2 x 92.4 cm Private collection |  |
 | A Peacock on a fallen Vase by a marble female Bust beside a stone Fountain, with a Turkey, Poultry and Sunflowers in a mountainous LandscapeAbraham Bisschop, 1722 Oil on canvas 228 x 169.9 cm Private collection |
Van der Blijk was born in an artistic family His father, Raphal, was an active art-collector and respected expert. Frans had frequently contacts with the Dordrechtsche artists such as J.C. Schotel and Abraham van Strij. On the age of fifteen Frans proved to be a talented artist and was accepted as a member of the Dordrecht drawing societssy Pictura. He became a pupil of J.C. Schotel. Together with other pupils and his master they made a journey along the coast of Holland in 1828. The next year they travelled to Flanders and France. In 1830 Frans joined exhibitions of paintings from living masters in Amsterdam en The Hague. In 1830 his career was intermittent during the Belgium war of independence and he took part with the Dordrecht civic guard to restrain the insurrection in the 'ten days campaign'. During this campaign he made an aquarelle showing the transport of soldiers by ship. In 1832 he continues his career as painter. River viewFrans van den Blijk, ca. 1847 Oil on canvas 106,5 x 167,5 cm Dordrechts Museum |  |
 | AA still waterFrans van den Blijk, ca. 1848 Oil on panel 73,7 x 94,1 cm Dordrechts Museum Even as his master J.C. Schotel he mostly painted sea and river views with color nuances in the sky parts of his paintings. |
Sail ship with pilot boat on full seaFrans van den Blijk Oil on panel 27,4 x 36,8 cm Museum Kröller-Müller museum, Otterlo Dordts painter, apprentice of the marine painter J. C. Schotel, also from Dordrecht. Painted harbor, river and sea views, mostly with sail ship. He oriented chiefly and around Dordrecht, but made also trips along the coast of Flanders and France. |  |
.jpg) | Moored trawers in forth Rammekes (Westerschelde) Frans van den Blijk Oil on panel 27,7 x 36,9 cm Museum Boymans van Beuningen, Rotterdam Dordts painter, apprentice of the marine painter J. C. Schotel, also from Dordrecht. Painted harbor, river and sea views, mostly with sail ship. He oriented chiefly and around Dordrecht, but made also trips along the coast of Flanders and France. |
Shipping in the Harbour at CalaisFrans van den Blijk Pencil, pen and grey and brown ink, grey and brown wash, grey ink framing lines 27 x 39,4 cm Private collection |  |
 | Shipping near a harbour entranceFrans van den Blijk, 1859 Oil on canvas 50.5 x 74 cm Private collection |
Next : Famous painters from Dordrecht, Part 2 | |