Pieter Pietersz Barbiers

Pieter Pietersz Barbiers (also Pieter Barbiers Pzn., or Pieter Barbiers II, bapt. October 26, 1749, Amsterdam - October 26, 1842, Amsterdam) was a 19th-century painter from the Northern Netherlands.

Portrait of Pieter Pietersz Barbiers by Jean Augustin Daiwaille

Biography

Pastoral landscape with figures, 1819, collection Teylers Museum

According to the RKD he was the son of Pieter Barbiers (1717-1780) and the brother of Bartholomeus Barbiers.[1] He became a member of the Amsterdam Guild of St. Luke in 1786, but the group dissolved in 1796 when the guilds were abolished during the French occupation.[1] He became a member of the Royal Academy of Amsterdam in 1822.[1] His pupils were his nephew Bartholomeus Barbiers the younger, and the following students at the academy: Carel Lodewijk Hansen, Jan Hulswit (painter), Johannes Jelgerhuis, Daniël Kerkhoff, Johannes Hendrik Knoop, Thomas van Leent, Jacobus Pelgrom, Petrus Antonius Ravelli, Abraham Johannes Ruytenschildt, Johan Christiaan Willem Safft, Barend Hendrik Thier, Pier Johannes de Visser, and Henricus Franciscus Wiertz.[1] He left fine landscapes, often representing the environs of Geldern and Haarlem.

gollark: ```Instead of the programs I had hoped for, there came only a shuddering blackness and ineffable loneliness; and I saw at last a fearful truth which no one had ever dared to breathe before — the unwhisperable secret of secrets — The fact that this language of stone and stridor is not a sentient perpetuation of Rust as London is of Old London and Paris of Old Paris, but that it is in fact quite unsafe, its sprawling body imperfectly embalmed and infested with queer animate things which have nothing to do with it as it was in compilation.```
gollark: https://doc.rust-lang.org/nomicon/index.html
gollark: Do not embark on the madness of unsafe Rust. Not even the Rustonomicon can save you fully.
gollark: Use `Mutex` in the standard library.
gollark: Also, not much overhead, probably just a few increments and decrements per borrow.

References

  • Rose, Hugh James (1857). A New General Biographical Dictionary. London: B. Fellowes et al.
  • Pieter Barbiers on Artnet


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