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This is a list of Dutch painters who were born and/or were primarily active in the Netherlands. ... Master of Alkmaar (active 1475–1515 in Alkmaar)
Master of the Legend of St. Ursula (Bruges) (Bruges, 1436 – Bruges, 1505), 1 work; Master of the Lille Adoration (Antwerp, 1510 – Antwerp, 1530), 1 work; Master of the Amsterdam Death of the Virgin (Amsterdam, 1480 – Utrecht, 1500), 4 works; Master of Badia a Isola (active c. 1290–1320), 1 work; Master of the St. Elizabeth Panels (1480 ...
Dutch painters – artists of Dutch painting from the Netherlands. This category also contains subcategories for painters born before 1830, when Belgium claimed its independence. To differentiate these regions before 1830, they are referred to as the Northern Netherlands and the Southern Netherlands .
Many history paintings were small in scale, with the German painter (based in Rome) Adam Elsheimer as much an influence as Caravaggio (both died in 1610) on Dutch painters like Pieter Lastman, Rembrandt's master, and Jan and Jacob Pynas. Compared to Baroque history painting from other countries, they shared the Dutch emphasis on realism, and ...
Many painters, sculptors and architects of the seventeenth century are called "Dutch masters", while earlier artists are generally referred to as part of the "Netherlandish" tradition. When a work of art is labelled as 'Dutch School', it means that the specific artist who created it is unknown.
It includes painters such as Rubens from (or mostly active in) the Southern Netherlands, which is approximately the area of modern Flanders and modern Wallonia. Painters born later than c.1810 are in the List of Belgian painters. For painters from the Northern Netherlands (such as Rembrandt), see List of Dutch painters.
This is a non-diffusing parent category of Category:18th-century Dutch women painters The contents of that subcategory can also be found within this category, or in diffusing subcategories of it. Contents
Dutch Golden Age painting spans a period from roughly 1575–1725, with most of the truly great artistic works being created between 1609 and 1672. Geographically speaking, the Dutch Golden Age was a period of economic prosperity for the Northern Netherlands, experiencing growth centered around the harbor of Amsterdam .