Piet Verhaert

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Self-Portrait of Piet Verhaert

Piet Verhaert, also known as Pieter Verhaert, birthname is Petrus Josephus Verhaert[1] (Antwerp, 25 February 1852 – Oostduinkerke, 4 August 1908) was a Belgian painter and etcher painter of genre scenes, cityscapes. interiors, figures and portraits. He was also a designer of decorative panels. He was a member of various avant-garde artist associations such as Les XX and De XIII (Cercle des XIII) which were dissatisfied with the conservative selection policies of the official academic Salons. He was a teacher at the Academy of Antwerp.[2]

Life and career[edit]

Verhaert trained at the Academy of Antwerp, where he first studied sculpting but then switched to painting. One of his teachers there was Jozef Van Lerius (1823-1876), a painter in the Belgian Romantic-Historical style.[3] He was part of a group of young artists known as the "Van Beers Clique", led by Jan van Beers. This group included the artists Alexander Struys and Jef Lambeaux. They were well known for their mischievous and eccentric behaviour, which included walking around Antwerp dressed in historic costumes.[4]

The Palingbrugstraat in Antwerp

He travelled to The Netherlands, Italy and later Spain. He debuted in 1873 at the Triannual Salon van Antwerpen. He stayed in Paris during the year 1876. During his time in Spain (1882–83), he made copies after works by Velázquez.[2]

He was among a large number of Antwerp artists who established the 'Vereeniging der Antwerpsche etsers' or 'l'Association des aquafortistes anversois' ("Association of Antwerp Etchers") founded in 1880. The co-founders included Willem Linnig the Elder, Willem Linnig the Elder, Léon Abry, Constant Cap, Flor Crabeels, Edgard Farasyn, Jean Pierre François Lamorinière, Egide François Leemans, Joseph Van Luppen, Isidoor Meyers, Jean Baptiste Pierre Michiels, Karel Ooms, Max Rooses, Hendrik Frans Schaefels, Lucas Victor Schaefels, Jan Stobbaerts, Frans Van Kuyck, A.-J. Verhoeven, Jozef Bal and Charles Verlat. The Vereeniging published an annual album containing graphic works of its members.[5]

He was a member of Les XX ("The Twenty"), an association founded on 28 October 1883 in Brussels by artists who were unhappy with the conservative policies of the official academic Salon. It introduced through its exhibitions works of foreign artists such as Paul Signac, Auguste Rodin, Camille Pissarro, Walter Sickert, James McNeill Whistler and Paul Cézanne.[3]

The port of Goes

He was one of the co-founders of De XIII (Cercle des XIII) established in Antwerp in February 1891 with objectives similar to those of Les XX of Brussels.[6] The members of “De XIII” included Léon Abry, Emile Claus (who was still living in Antwerp at the time), Edouard de Jans, Henri De Smeth, Edgar Farasyn, Maurice Hagemans, Frans Hens Evert Larock, Romain Looymans, Charles Mertens, Henry Luyten, Henry Rul, Leo Van Aken, Louis van Engelen and Theodoor Verstraete. It existed until 1899 and, during its existence, held only three salons.[2]

He was a teacher at the Academy of Antwerp from 1886.[2] When Pieter Van Havermaet died on 8 May 1897, Verhaert succeeded him as a teacher at the Antwerp Academy in the subjects of 'Drawing of the figure after life and after antiques' and 'Shadowed drawing after plaster, bust, etc'.[7] From 1892 to 1908 he was a member of the provincial council of Antwerp as a representative of the Liberal Party.[2]

Verhaert died on 4 August 1908 in Oostduinkerke in tragic circumstances after a heated argument with a neighbour over a boundary marker. He suffered a congestion which lead to his death.[3]

Work[edit]

The Card Players

He was a painter and etcher of townscapes, interiors, figures and portraits. He was also a notable painter of decorative panels. He painted initially predominantly genre scenes of the 17th and 18th centuries in a precise style and palette reminiscent of the Antwerp painter Henri de Braekeleer. From the beginning of the 1880s he started to work in plein-air and to add more colour to his palette. He also depicted contemporary rather than historical scenes. He is best known for his depictions of the old quarters of Antwerp. He painted a fresco in the Antwerp City Hall in 1899.[6]

As a graphic artist, Verhaert produced series of etchings under the titles Croquis et Impressions de la vieille Ville d'Anvers (Sketches and Impressions of the Old City of Antwerp) and Le Centenaire de la Réouverture de l'Escaut (The Centenary of the Reopening of the Scheldt). These two albums contain reproductions of drawings done in sepia, chalk or coal and mostly after nature. As an etcher, Verhaert worked directly with the needle on the sensitive plate.[6]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Piet Verhaert at the Netherlands Institute for Art History
  2. ^ a b c d e Biography of Verhaert at Schoonselhof
  3. ^ a b c Verhaert, Piet (1852-1908) at Brave Fine Art
  4. ^ "Jan van Beers, Belgian (1852–1927)". rogallery.com. ROgallery. Retrieved 8 March 2014.
  5. ^ Jules Dujardin and Josef Middeler, L'art flamand, A. Boitte, Brussels, 1896, p. 174 (in French)
  6. ^ a b c Pol de Mont, Piet Verhaert, Kunst en Leven. Jaargang 1 (1902-1903)
  7. ^ Jeroen Boel, Pieter Van Havermaet, kunstschilder (Sint-Niklaas 16 januari 1834 – Antwerpen 8 mei 1897), Annalen van de Koninklijke Oudheidkundige Kring van het Land van Waas, deel 120, 2017

External links[edit]

Media related to Piet Verhaert at Wikimedia Commons