Jan de Baen

Dutch painter
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroDutch painter
A.K.A.Jan Van Baam Johannes de Baen De Baan Jan De Baen
A.K.A.Jan Van Baam Johannes de Baen De Baan Jan De Baen
PlacesNetherlands
wasPainter
Work fieldArts
Gender
Male
Genres:Portrait
Birth20 February 1633, Haarlem, Netherlands
DeathMarch 1702The Hague, Netherlands (aged 69 years)
Star signPisces
Family
Children:Jacobus de Baen
Notable Works
Portrait of Johan Maurits (1604-1679), Count of Nassau-Siegen 
Allegory of Cornelis de Witt (1623-1672) as Instigator of the Victory at Chatham in 1667 
Portrait of Johan de Witt (1625-72), Grand Pensionary of Holland 
The details

Biography

Jan de Baen (20 February 1633 – 1702) was a Dutch portrait painter who lived during the Dutch Golden Age. He was a pupil of the painter Jacob Adriaensz Backer in Amsterdam from 1645 to 1648. He worked for Charles II of England in his Dutch exile, and from 1660 until his death he lived and worked in The Hague. His portraits were popular in his day, and he painted the most distinguished people of his time.

Biography

Jan de Baen was born on 20 February 1633 in Haarlem, Holland, Dutch Republic. After his parents died, when he was a child, he lived with his uncle Hinderk Pyman (or Piemans) in Emden. Jan de Baen received his first painting lessons from his uncle, who was a painter himself. From 1645 to 1648 he lived in Amsterdam, where he was the pupil of painter Jacob Adriaensz Backer.

After completing his training, he worked for the exiled court of Charles II of England, but upon the English Restoration of 1660 did not follow his patron, but moved to The Hague, where he worked as a portrait painter for the rest of his life. The Elector of Brandenburg asked him to work at his court in Berlin, but he refused this invitation. He was the teacher of his son, the painter Jacobus de Baen, and the pupils Johann Friedrich Bodecker, Denys Godijn, Hendrik van Limborch, Nicolaes van Ravesteyn, Petro van Rijs, Jan van Sweel, and Johannes Vollevens.

He died in 1702 around his 69th birthday, and was buried in The Hague on 8 March 1702. In his biographical sketch of Jan de Baen, Houbraken claims that he taught his son Jacobus to paint, who died at 27.

Works

His portraits were popular in his own day, and he painted the most distinguished people of his time. He painted Cornelis de Witt and his brother Johan de Witt both alive and dead. He portrayed the Grandduke of Tuscany, and King-stadtholder William III of England. Besides portraits, he also painted cityscapes, history paintings, and genre paintings.

The German Meyers Konversations-Lexikon (1885–1892) states that his large reputation during his life was not justified by his "characterless, rigid, and unattractively coloured images".

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 06 Apr 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.