Nationality Nederland Died January 21, 1711 Name Augustinus Terwesten | Movement Baroque Known for Painting, engraving Period Baroque | |
![]() | ||
Born 4 May 1649 ( 1649-05-04 ) |
Augustinus Terwesten (1649, The Hague – 1711, Berlin) was a 17th-century painter from the northern Netherlands specialized in portraits, architectural, and historical themes.
Contents
Early years in the Hague
Augustinus Terwesten studied with a painter named Wielin in the Hague who later went to serve Frederick Willem von Brandenburg. He then took lessons from Willem Doudyns for two years before setting off on a Grand Tour through Germany to Italy in 1672, where he spent three years.
Grand Tour to Rome and the Bentvueghels
In Rome he became a member of the painters' circle known as the Bentvueghels, where he earned the nickname "Patrysvogel", or partridge, after the story of Perdix by Ovid. He went back to the Hague via France and England, and was gone for a total of 6 years. In 1678 he set up a workshop in the Hague specialized in wall and ceiling decorations. 1682–1683 he helped to set up the Drawing Academy in the Hague set up by the "Confrerie Pictura".
German professor
In 1692 he became court painter to the son of his former royal patron, Frederick I of Prussia, in Berlin, and talked him into sponsoring an Akademie der Künste. After overseeing the building of this academy which was completed in 1697, he became professor there and lived there until his death in 1711. He taught both of his brothers Elias and Mattheus Terwesten, but also the painters Frans Beeldemaker, Nikolaus Bruno Belau, Andries Bertoen, Jacobus Bisschop, Nicolaes Hooft, and Cornelis Michiarus.
He is remembered today for his historical allegories and portraits.