Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Jacob Ochtervelt

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Jacob Ochtervelt

Role
  
Painter

Period
  
Dutch Golden Age


Jacob Ochtervelt Jacob Ochtervelt Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Died
  
1682, Amsterdam, Netherlands

Artwork
  
Regents of the Leper's house in Amsterdam

No Ordinary Meal – Jacob Ochtervelt’s Radiant Masterpiece


Jacob Ochtervelt (1634 in Rotterdam – 1682 in Amsterdam), was a Dutch Golden Age painter.

Contents

Jacob Ochtervelt The oyster meal Jacob Ochtervelt 1667 Museum Boijmans

Biography

Jacob Ochtervelt Oil PaintingsOil Paintings Reproductions Discount

Jacob Ochtervelt was a Dutch Golden Age genre painter whose contemporaries included Vermeer, Ter Borch, and De Hooch. Despite his prolific work, he was ignored by the three major 17th century art bibliographers, Andre Felibien, Jochaim Sandrart, and R. de Piles. He was first mentioned by Arnold Houbraken, a biographer of Dutch Golden Age painters, who wrote that "Jakob Ugtervelt was a pupil of N. Berchem during the same period as "Pieter de Hooge" (Hooch), who was famed for his interior conversation pieces with lords and ladies, but without much perspective in his backgrounds, which takes a certain amount of mathematical insight and skill." The way this comment was written leaves the reader questioning whether Houbraken thought Hooch or Ochtervelt painted perspective poorly. According to Abraham Jacob van der Aa's later biography of him, his style was more in keeping with Gerard Terburg or Gabriel Metzu, and in addition to sharing Berchem's studio with Hooch, he had been a pupil of Frans van Mieris the Elder.

Jacob Ochtervelt httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

According to the Netherlands Institute for Art History, he was active in Haarlem where he was a student of Nicolaes Pietersz Berchem and later he moved back to Rotterdam (1655–1672) where he was a pupil of Ludolf de Jongh (who also taught Pieter de Hooch). After the 1672 disaster year he moved to Amsterdam.


Jacob Ochtervelt Jacob Ochtervelt

References

Jacob Ochtervelt Wikipedia