Hendrick Danckerts
Hendrick Danckerts (c.1625 - 1680) was a Dutch Golden Age painter and engraver, mostly of houses in their landscape settings.[1] After some years in Italy, he spent most of his career in London, working for Charles II and his brother.
Biography
[edit]Danckerts was born in The Hague, where he learned his trade and remained until 1653.[2] He visited England for the first time in 1650.[2] In 1653 he went to Italy, where he stayed for five years.[2] He then moved to England where he entered the service of Charles II and the Duke of York (later James II & VII.) He painted Italianate landscapes, especially views of harbours and royal residences.[2] He also produced portraits and devotional pictures and made engravings after the Italian old masters in the Royal Collection. He left England in 1679[2] due to the public hostility towards Roman Catholics after the Popish Plot controversy. He died soon after in Amsterdam, and was buried on 2 November 1680.[2]
He was also known as the "Master with the two Anchors" and was the younger brother of the painter Johan Danckerts.[2] Danckerts has twenty paintings in public ownership in the United Kingdom.[3]
Gallery
[edit]-
Hampton Court Palace, c.1666
-
A View of Tangier, 1669
-
A View of Greenwich and the Queen's House, c.1670
-
A Panorama of Monmouth with Troy House, 1672
-
Plymouth, 1673
-
Palace of Whitehall from St James's Park, c.1674
-
A View of Portsmouth, 1675
-
Figures in a Classical Garden, 1675
-
Classical Landscape, 1677
-
A View of Falmouth Harbour, 1678
-
Nonsuch Palace from the North East
References
[edit]- ^ Robert Edmund Graves (1888). Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 14. London: Smith, Elder & Co. . In
- ^ a b c d e f g Hendrick Danckerts in RKD
- ^ 20 artworks by or after Hendrick Danckerts at the Art UK site