Jan Maurits Quinkhard

Jan Maurits Quinkhard (28 January 1688 ā€“ 11 November 1772) was an 18th-century painter and print designer from the Northern Netherlands.

Jan Maurits Quinkhardt (Reinier Vinkeles, 1764)
Half-length portrait of Gustaaf Willem Baron van Imhoff (1705ā€“1750), Governor from 1743 to 1750, from a collection of portraits of governors of the former Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia) owned by the Rijksmuseum Amsterdam.

Biography

Quinkhard was born in the town of Rees, near Cleves. He was a Dutch painter and scholar of his father (the painter Julius Quinkhardt the elder), Arnold van Boonen, Christoffel Lubinietski, and Nikolaas Verkolje. He painted familiar, allegorical, and mythological subjects, and was excellent in portraits, of which he painted a great number. Five good examples are in the Amsterdam Museum.[1] His son Julius (1736-1776) was instructed by his father, but abandoned art for commerce. Two pictures by him are in the Amsterdam Museum. He also collaborated with Jacobus Houbraken and other leading engravers on prints of the rich and famous of Amsterdam.[2]

[3] His pupils were Jurriaan Andriessen, Ludolf Backhuijzen (II), Jan de Beijer, Johannes Cornelis Mertens, his son Julius Henricus Quinkhard, Tibout Regters, Izaak Schmidt, Adriaan Schregardus, Jan Stolker, Johannes Verrier, Pieter Wagenaar (II), and Jan Gerard Waldorp.[3] He died, aged 84, at Amsterdam.

Notes

  1. Search function Archived 18 November 2011 at the Wayback Machine in online collection of the Amsterdam Museum (use search term "Quinkhard")
  2. Quinkhard search term at the Stadsarchief Amsterdam
  3. Jan Maurits Quinkhard in the RKD

References

  • Quinkhard, Jan Maurits at the Netherlands Institute for Art History.
  • "Jan Maurits Quinkhard". Artnet.

Attribution:

  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Bryan, Michael (1889). "Quinkhardt, Jan Maurits". In Armstrong, Sir Walter; Graves, Robert Edmund (eds.). Bryan's Dictionary of Painters and Engravers (Lā€“Z). II (3rd ed.). London: George Bell & Sons.


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