Remigius Adrianus Haanen

Remigius Adrianus Haanen or Remigius (Remy) van Haanen, (January 5, 1812, Oosterhout - August 13, 1894, Bad Aussee) was a 19th-century painter from the Northern Netherlands. He was the son of the papercutter Casparis Haanen and was the brother of the painters George Gillis Haanen, Elisabeth Alida Haanen and Adriana Johanna Haanen.[1] After learning his trade from his father and at the Academy of Utrecht, he moved in 1837 from the Netherlands to Austria, where he was active in Vienna.

Public Collections

  • Museum of Foreign Art, Riga
  • Rijksmuseum Amsterdam[2]
gollark: There seems to at least be consistent agreement on basic stuff like "if you consume more calories than you use, you will increase in weight".
gollark: Automated trading is cool and very weird at the same time.
gollark: I don't get it.
gollark: Not *exactly*, since it incentivizes actually making progress in the first place.
gollark: Intellectual property is among the weird and vaguely broken things too, come to think of it.

References

  1. Remigius Adrianus Haanen in the RKD
  2. "Search". Rijksmuseum.


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