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Jan van Rymsdyk

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Name
  
Jan Rymsdyk

Role
  
Painter

Died
  
1790


Jan van Rymsdyk

Jan van Rymsdyk (also Rijmsdijck, Riemsdyk, Remsdyke) (c. 1730 - c. 1790) was a Dutch painter and engraver.

Contents

Jan van Rymsdyk Jan van Rymsdyk Drawer of Wombs The Sterile Eye

Life

Rymsdyk was active The Hague in the late 1740s but was in London by 1750. In 1758 he moved away to Bristol and practised as a portrait-painter; in 1764 he returned to London.

Works

In 1767 Rymsdyk executed a mezzotint engraving of Frederick Henry and Emilia Van Solms, Prince and Princess of Orange, from a painting by Jacob Jordaens at Devonshire House. His skill brought him work with William Hunter, and he executed some of the engravings for Hunter's Anatomia Humani Gravidi Uteri (1774). In 1778, with his son Andrew, he published a series of plates from antiquities and curiosities in the British Museum, Museum Britannicum (second, revised edition 1791).

Family

His son, Andreas van Rymsdyk, gained a medal at the Society of Arts in 1767, and in 1778 exhibited two enamels at the Royal Academy. He assisted his father in his works, and died at Bath in 1786.

References

Jan van Rymsdyk Wikipedia