Jan Frans van Dael

Jan Frans van Dael or Jean-François van Dael (27 May 1764 20 March 1840) was a Flemish painter and lithographer specializing in still lifes of flowers and fruit. He had a successful career in Paris where his patrons included the Empresses of Empire France as well as the kings of Restoration France.[1]

Still life of flowers in an alabaster vase with fruit on a stone ledge

Life

Jan Frans van Dael was born in Antwerp as the son of a joiner.[2] He studied architectural drawing at the Antwerp Academy. He won the Academy's first prizes for architecture in 1784 and 1785.[3]

The house of the artist

He travelled to Paris in 1786 where he resided there in the artists' accommodations at the Louvre, near artists Piat Joseph Sauvage, Gerard van Spaendonck en Pierre-Joseph Redouté. From 1806 until 1813 he worked as a state-protected artist in a studio in the Sorbonne.[3][4]

He was originally active as a decorator and worked on projects at the châteaux of St. Cloud, Bellevue and Chantilly.[5] He became self-taught in painting. Under the influence of van Spaendonck he turned to flower painting.

He regularly submitted work to the Paris Salon between 1793 and 1833 as well as to Salons in the Low Countries. Evidence of his success are the many commissions he secured from the Empresses Josephine (who owned five of his works) and Marie-Louise Bonaparte as well as Restoration kings Louis XVIII and Charles X.[1][4] Van Dael was a member of the Academies of Antwerp and Amsterdam.[2]

Julie's tomb

He collected the works of flower artists, both by his contemporaries and the great 17th-century Dutch still life painters Jan Davidsz. de Heem, Abraham Mignon, Rachel Ruysch and Jan van Huysum.[3]

His pupils were Jean Benner-Fries, Elise Bruyère, Laurent Coste, Vicomtesse Iphigénie Decaux-Milet-Moreau, Henriëtte Geertruida Knip, Elisa-Emilie Le Mire, Auguste Piquet de Brienne, Christiaan van Pol, Adèle Riché, and Jean Ulrich Tournier.[3]

He spent his whole active career in France. He died in Paris in 1840 and was buried in the cemetery of Père Lachaise by the side of his friend van Spaendonck.[3]

Work

Van Dael mainly painted still lifes of flowers and fruit. Some of these compositions include a background landscape. Van Dael also painted a landscape composition.[1] Van Dael signed as 'Vandael' and monogrammed as: I V D, V D and VD connected.[3]

Flower bouquet in a glass

Van Dael's work stands in the Flemish and Dutch tradition of flower painting exemplified by Roelandt Savery with its sober composition and attention to detail. He also brought to many of his flower arrangements a French-inspired decorative monumentality.[1]

Van Dael composed his flower-pieces with a variety of species, which he is believed to have studied from life.[5] Van Dael's flowers were based on botanical study, and according to a contemporary botanist, van Hulthem, he grew flowers in his garden to serve as models.[2] Van Dael applied a smooth gesso layer to his canvases, which allowed him to recreate the jewel-like quality of 17th century panels. He departed from 17th-century still lifes in his use of a lighter palette of pinks, blues and yellows.[5]

A number of his still life works were used to decorate small objects, such as boxes. The Fitzwilliam Museum possesses a collection of these boxes.[6]

Van Dael painted in 1828 a view of his house (Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam), which is a small masterpiece.[4] He further painted a few religious and allegorical compositions. One of his best known allegorical paintings is Julie’s Tomb of 1804 (Château de Malmaison). It depicts a flower and fruit arrangement before a tomb and can be read as an allegory of life and death.[1] Van Dael also made a few pure landscapes and occasionally painted portraits, often of fellow artists.[2]

He also made a few lithographs.[1]

gollark: I don't know exactly what you consider big, but there seemingly is in fact a weird discontinuity in whiteboard pricing.
gollark: It seems that a 120x90cm board is £40.
gollark: I see.
gollark: As an incredibly horrible workaround, you can use a camera, projector and lots of computer vision stuff.
gollark: I should check.

References

  1. Dominique Vautier. "Dael, Jean-François van." Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press. Web. 28 Feb. 2015
  2. Jan Frans van Dael Archived 2016-07-01 at the Wayback Machine at Richard Green Fine Paintings
  3. Jan Frans van Dael at the Netherlands Institute for Art History (in Dutch)
  4. Jan Frans van Dael, The House of the Artist at the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
  5. Jan Frans van Dael (Antwerp 1764-1840 Paris), A vase of flowers with a bird's nest on a marble ledge at Christie's
  6. Boxes decorated by Jan Frans van Dael Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine at the Fitzwilliam Museum

Media related to Jan Frans van Dael at Wikimedia Commons

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.