Jan Baptist Huysmans
Jan Baptist Huysmans (born 1654 in Antwerp; died 1716 in Antwerp) was a Flemish painter active in Antwerp who is known for his Italianate and arcadian landscapes and architectural capricci.
Life
Jan Baptist Huysmans was born in Antwerp as the son of Hendrick Huysmans and Catharina van der Meyden. He was baptized in Antwerp Cathedral on 7 October 1654.[1] Jan Baptist was the brother of Cornelis, a prominent landscape painter.[2] His brother Cornelis was possibly his teacher, although his possibly also studied for a while with the marine painter Hendrik van Minderhout.[3][4] He was registered as a pupil at the Antwerp Guild of Saint Luke in 1675/76 and he became a master in 1676/77.[1]
He possibly influenced Cornelis' son Pieter Balthasar.[2] In 1697-98 he had a registered pupil by the name of Peeter Geeraerts.[1]
He died in Antwerp.[2]
Work
Jan Baptist Huysman was a landscape artist. His work has often been confused with those of his elder brother Cornelis who painted the same subject matter. A work entitled Landscape with animals (Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium), which is signed and dated to 1697, and another one entitled Landscape with Ruins (Shipley Art Gallery), which is signed and dated to 1694, have allowed more of his oeuvre to be distinguished from that of his brother.[5][6]
Like his brother Cornelis he painted imaginary Italianate landscapes. His works are often a fusion of the style of North European wooded landscape painting with the Italian inspired vista. In his landscapes with ruins Huysmans also shows his indebtedness to the type of architectural landscape painting first popularised by Claude Lorraine in Rome and by Nicolas Poussin. These landscapes often depict a glimpse of a pastoral idyll although they may sometimes include elements such as ruins and a tomb, which remind the viewer of the closeness of death.[5]
Jan Baptist Huysmans also painted architectural capricci, i.e. architectural fantasies, which place together buildings, archaeological ruins and other architectural elements in fictional and often fantastical combinations and may also include staffage (figures). An example is A ruined classical archway (National Trust, Dinton, Wiltshire), which shows ruins of a triumphal arch and the statue of the Borghese Gladiator. In the right foreground are also depicted satyrs and nymphs who are festooning an Egypto-Roman stone lion.[7]
As was common practice at the time, he collaborated with specialist painters in Antwerp such as the history and figure painter Jan Erasmus Quellinus. Jan Baptist Huysmans would typically provide the landscape elements in these collaborative works.[7] Examples of collaborations with Quellinus are the Mercury turns the jealous Aglaulus into stone in the Musée des beaux-arts de Marseille (c. 1700) and the composition A ruined classical archway mentioned in the previous paragraph.[7][8]
References
- Ph. Rombouts en Th. Van Lerius, 'De Liggeren en andere Historische Archieven der Antwerpsche Sint Lucasgilde, onder Zinkspreuk: "Wy Jonsten Versaemt"', Julius de Koninck, 1871, pp. 439, 450 and 607 (in Dutch)
- Jan Baptist Huysmans at the Netherlands Institute for Art History (in Dutch)
- Tableaux flamands et hollandais du Musée des Beaux-Arts de Lyon, Institut Neérlandais, Paris, Musée des Beaux-Arts, Lyon (France). Institut néerlandais (Paris, France), Waanders, 1991, p. 67 (in French)
- Olaf Koester, Statens museum for kunst, Flemish paintings, 1600-1800, Statens Museum for Kunst, 2000, p. 124
- Jan Baptiste Huysmans, Landscape with Ruins at Shipley Art Gallery
- Jan Baptist Huysmans, Landscape with animals at the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium
- A Ruined Classical Archway by Jan Baptist Huysmans and Jan Erasmus Quellinus at BBC your paintings
- Jan Erasmus Quellinus and Jan Baptist Huysmans, Mercury changes the jealous Aglauros into stone (Ovidi, Metamorphoses, 2:710-835), ca. 1700 Marseille, Musée des Beaux-Arts de Marseille, at the Netherlands Institute for Art History (in Dutch)
External links
Media related to Jan Baptist Huysmans at Wikimedia Commons