Christian Berentz

Christian Berentz or Bernetz[1] (1658–1722) was a German Baroque painter.

Christian Berentz, Flowers, Fruit with a Woman Picking Grapes, by Berentz and Carlo Maratta, National Museum of Capodimonte, 1689

Biography

Berentz was born in Hamburg, Germany. According to the RKD pupil he was the pupil of Hermann Kamphusen from 1667–1673 and then from 1673-1677 a pupil of Georg Hainz.[2] He travelled through the Netherlands in the years 1677-1679 and in 1679 he travelled to Venice and from there to Rome where he stayed until 1722.[2] Like Franz Werner von Tamm (called Dapper), he is registered as the teacher of Pietro Navarra.[2] Like Tamm, Berentz is also registered as working in the Carlo Maratta studio. He is known for still lifes in the manner of Pieter Claesz, Maximilian Pfeiler, Willem Kalf, Pieter Gerritsz van Roestraten, and Francesco Noletti.[2]

In Rome in the 1700s, he lived in the house of Marchese Pallavicini. Berentz painted primarily still lifes, and was important, because he introduced North European themes.[3] He died in Rome in 1722.[4]

gollark: That sure is a diagram.
gollark: Lots of people would probably not call those communist.
gollark: These lens things are basically a somewhat insane thing invented by functional programmers to view/set specific parts of data structures.
gollark: https://i.imgur.com/ALlbPRa.png
gollark: Are your lenses related to these things?

References

  1. Verzeichniss der kurfurstllichen Gemahlde-Sammlung. 1830. p. 114.
  2. Christian Berentz in the RKD
  3. "Christian Berentz" (in German). Dorotheum GmbH & Co KG. Archived from the original on 2009-10-01. Retrieved 2009-10-25.
  4. "Brief Bio Christian Berentz". Retrieved 2009-10-23.

Simona Sperindei, Niccolò Maria Pallavicini, mecenate, collezionista e protettore di Christian Berentz, in "Annali della Pontificia Insigne Accademia di Belle Arti e Lettere dei Virtuosi al Pantheon", XII, 2012, pp. 537–542.


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