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{{Short description|Flemish engraver}}
[[File:Marten de Vos Adriaen Collaert America.jpg|thumb|right|300px|''America'', from a series on the [[Four continents]], after [[Marten de Vos]].]]
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2020}}
'''Adriaen Collaert''' (ca.1560 – 1618), was a Flemish designer and [[engraving|engraver]].
[[File:Marten de Vos Adriaen Collaert America.jpg|thumb|right|300px|''America'', from a series on the [[Four continents]], after [[Maerten de Vos]].]]
'''Adriaen Collaert''' (c. 1560 – 29 June 1618) was a Flemish designer and [[engraving|engraver]].{{cn|date=February 2024}}


==Biography==
==Biography==
The year he was born at Antwerp is not known, but this is determined to be between 1555 and 1565.<ref name=RKD>[http://www.rkd.nl/rkddb/dispatcher.aspx?action=search&database=ChoiceArtists&search=priref=17686 Adriaen Collaert] in the [[RKD]]</ref> According to the RKD in 1580 he became wijnmeester of the [[Guild of St. Luke]]. The title wijnmeester was reserved for sons of members, and he was the son of [[Hans Collaert|Jan Collaert I]] and Anna van der Heijden. He married Justa Galle, the daughter of the man he worked for, [[Philip Galle]].<ref name=RKD/> He also worked for [[Gerard de Jode]] (where he made prints after [[Maerten de Vos]]), Eduard Hoeswinckel and Hans van Luyck.<ref name=RKD/> Alter having learnt the principles of the art in his own country, he visited Italy for improvement, where he passed some years. On his return to Flanders, he engraved a great number of plates, executed in a neatly finished style, but with a certain degree of dryness. He died at Antwerp in 1618.<ref name=RKD/> His drawing is correct, and his heads expressive. He sometimes marked his plates with a cipher.
The estimated year of his birth at Antwerp is between 1555 and 1565.<ref name=RKD>[https://rkd.nl/en/explore/artists/17686 Adriaen Collaert] in the [[RKD]]</ref> According to the RKD in 1580 he became wijnmeester of the [[Guild of St. Luke]]. The title wijnmeester was reserved for sons of members, and he was the son of [[Hans Collaert|Jan Collaert I]] and Anna van der Heijden. He married Justa Galle, the daughter of the man he worked for, [[Philip Galle]].<ref name=RKD/> He also worked for [[Gerard de Jode]] (where he made prints after [[Maerten de Vos]]), Eduard Hoeswinckel and Hans van Luyck.<ref name=RKD/> After having learnt the principles of the art in his own country, he visited Italy for improvement, where he passed some years. On his return to Flanders, he engraved a great number of plates, executed in a neatly finished style, but with a certain degree of dryness. He died at Antwerp in 1618.<ref name=RKD/> His drawing is correct, and his heads expressive. He sometimes marked his plates with a cipher.


From 1593-94 he took on pupils and from 1589 he worked for [[Plantijn Moretus]].<ref name=RKD/> His pupils were Jan Boel, Quirin Boel (I), Adriaan Boon, Jan Collaert (II), and Abraham van Merlen.<ref name=RKD/>
From 1593-94 he took on pupils and from 1589 he worked for [[Plantijn Moretus]].<ref name=RKD/> His pupils were Jan Boel, Quirin Boel (I), Adriaan Boon, Jan Collaert (II), and Abraham van Merlen.<ref name=RKD/> He was also an independent print publisher.<ref name=jasienski>Adam Jasienski: [http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~hsdept/docs/PW_Pt2.pdf Thinking visually] Gallery guide from the exhibition Paper Worlds: Printing Knowledge in Early Modern Europe, Department of the History of Science at Harvard University.</ref>

Adriaen Collaert was the brother of [[Jan Collaert II]], and he had a son, Jan Baptist Collaert II or Jan Collaert III (1591 - 1627/8), and a grandson who followed in his footsteps as print makers and publishers.<ref name=jasienski />


The following are his principal productions:
The following are his principal productions:
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*''A Man and his Wife, conducted by Death''. 1562.
*''A Man and his Wife, conducted by Death''. 1562.
*''A Man in Armour, to whom a Woman brings a Child, a Dog, and a Cock''.
*''A Man in Armour, to whom a Woman brings a Child, a Dog, and a Cock''.
*''The Four Elements''; in four plates.
*''The Life of Jesus Christ''; in thirty-six plates.
*''The Life of Jesus Christ''; in thirty-six plates.
*Thirty plates of Birds.
*Thirty plates of Birds.
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==Subjects after various masters==
==Subjects after various masters==
[[File:Early life of Christ in the Bowyer Bible print 21 of 21. healing of a paralytic by Jesus. Vos.gif|thumb|right|200px|''The healing of a paralytic by Jesus'', after Marten de Vos, ca. 1585, from the [[Robert Bowyer|Bowyer Bible]].]]
[[File:Early_life_of_Christ_in_the_Bowyer_Bible_print_21_of_21._healing_of_a_paralytic_by_Jesus._Vos.png|thumb|right|200px|''The healing of a paralytic by Jesus'', after Marten de Vos, ca. 1585, from the [[Robert Bowyer|Bowyer Bible]].]]
*''The Twelve Months of the Year''; after [[Joos de Momper|Josse De Momper]]; the same that [[Jacques Callot|Callot]] has engraved.
*''The Twelve Months of the Year''; after [[Joos de Momper|Josse De Momper]]; the same that [[Jacques Callot|Callot]] has engraved.
*''The Seven Planets'' 1581; after Maerten de Vos
*''Four Continents'' 1588–89; after the same
*''The Four Elements''; in four plates, after the same.
*''The Last Judgment''; after J. Stradan.
*''The Last Judgment''; after J. Stradan.
*''St. Hubert''; after the same.
*''St. Hubert''; after the same.
*Twelve plates of Horses ; after the same.
*''Twelve plates of Horses''; after the same.
*''A Hunting and Fishing Party''; after the same.
*''A Hunting and Fishing Party''; after the same.
*''The Israelitish Women singing the Song of Praise for the Destruction of the Egyptian Host in the Red Sea''; after the same.
*''The Israelitish Women singing the Song of Praise for the Destruction of the Egyptian Host in the Red Sea''; after the same.
*''A Woman saving her Child from a Lion''; after the same.
*''A Woman saving her Child from a Lion''; after the same.
*Twelve Landscapes; after [[Hendrick Van Cleve|Hendrik van Cleef]].
*Twelve Landscapes; after [[Hendrick Van Cleve III]].
*A set of Hermitesses; after M. de Vos ; engraved conjointly with his son [[Hans Collaert]].
*A set of Hermitesses; after M. de Vos; engraved conjointly with his son [[Hans Collaert]].
*''The Calling of St. Andrew to the Apostleship''; after [[Federico Barocci|Barocci]].
*''The Calling of St. Andrew to the Apostleship''; after [[Federico Barocci|Barocci]].
*''The Repose in Egypt''; after [[Hendrik Goltzius|H. Goltzius]]. 1585.
*''The Repose in Egypt''; after [[Hendrik Goltzius|H. Goltzius]]. 1585.
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==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
'''Attribution:'''
{{Bryan|article=COLLAERT, Adriaen}}
* {{Bryan (3rd edition)|title=Collaert, Adriaen |volume=1}}
*[http://www.artnet.com/artists/adriaen-collaert/past-auction-results Adriaen Collaert] on [[Artnet]]
*[http://www.artnet.com/artists/adriaen-collaert/past-auction-results Adriaen Collaert] on [[Artnet]]


==External links==
==External links==
[http://www.artsbma.org/collectionitemdetails?searchlayout=grid&showform=0&ordering=popular&searchphrase=exact&areas%5B0%5D=portfolio&searchartistname=Adriaen%20Collaert,%20Flemish,%20(about%201560%20-%201618)&areas%5B%5D=portfolio&searchlayout=details&limit=1&start=0| ''Burial of Jacob'' at the Birmingham Museum of Art]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20131227114432/http://www.artsbma.org/collectionitemdetails?searchlayout=grid&showform=0&ordering=popular&searchphrase=exact&areas%5B0%5D=portfolio&searchartistname=Adriaen%20Collaert%2C%20Flemish%2C%20%28about%201560%20-%201618%29&areas%5B%5D=portfolio&searchlayout=details&limit=1&start=0 ''Burial of Jacob'' at the Birmingham Museum of Art]

{{Authority control (arts)}}


{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| NAME = Collaert, Adriaen
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = designer, engraver
| DATE OF BIRTH = c. 1560
| PLACE OF BIRTH = Antwerp
| DATE OF DEATH = 1618
| PLACE OF DEATH = Antwerp
}}{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2011}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Collaert, Adriaen}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Collaert, Adriaen}}
[[Category:Year of birth unknown]]
[[Category:Year of birth unknown]]
[[Category:1560s births]]
[[Category:1560s births]]
[[Category:1618 deaths]]
[[Category:1618 deaths]]
[[Category:People from Antwerp]]
[[Category:Flemish botanical illustrators]]
[[Category:16th-century engravers]]
[[Category:16th-century engravers]]
[[Category:17th-century engravers]]
[[Category:17th-century engravers]]
[[Category:Flemish engravers]]
[[Category:Flemish engravers]]
[[Category:Members of the Antwerp Guild of Saint Luke]]
[[Category:Painters from Antwerp]]

{{Belgium-artist-stub}}

[[es:Adriaen Collaert]]
[[fr:Adriaen Collaert]]

Latest revision as of 08:09, 22 March 2024

America, from a series on the Four continents, after Maerten de Vos.

Adriaen Collaert (c. 1560 – 29 June 1618) was a Flemish designer and engraver.[citation needed]

Biography[edit]

The estimated year of his birth at Antwerp is between 1555 and 1565.[1] According to the RKD in 1580 he became wijnmeester of the Guild of St. Luke. The title wijnmeester was reserved for sons of members, and he was the son of Jan Collaert I and Anna van der Heijden. He married Justa Galle, the daughter of the man he worked for, Philip Galle.[1] He also worked for Gerard de Jode (where he made prints after Maerten de Vos), Eduard Hoeswinckel and Hans van Luyck.[1] After having learnt the principles of the art in his own country, he visited Italy for improvement, where he passed some years. On his return to Flanders, he engraved a great number of plates, executed in a neatly finished style, but with a certain degree of dryness. He died at Antwerp in 1618.[1] His drawing is correct, and his heads expressive. He sometimes marked his plates with a cipher.

From 1593-94 he took on pupils and from 1589 he worked for Plantijn Moretus.[1] His pupils were Jan Boel, Quirin Boel (I), Adriaan Boon, Jan Collaert (II), and Abraham van Merlen.[1] He was also an independent print publisher.[2]

Adriaen Collaert was the brother of Jan Collaert II, and he had a son, Jan Baptist Collaert II or Jan Collaert III (1591 - 1627/8), and a grandson who followed in his footsteps as print makers and publishers.[2]

The following are his principal productions:

Subjects from his own designs[edit]

  • A Man and his Wife, conducted by Death. 1562.
  • A Man in Armour, to whom a Woman brings a Child, a Dog, and a Cock.
  • The Life of Jesus Christ; in thirty-six plates.
  • Thirty plates of Birds.
  • One hundred and twenty-five plates of Fishes.
  • Twenty-four plates; entitled Florilegium ab Hadriano Collaert caelatum, &c.
  • The Temptation of St. Anthony.
  • St. Apollonia.

Subjects after various masters[edit]

The healing of a paralytic by Jesus, after Marten de Vos, ca. 1585, from the Bowyer Bible.
  • The Twelve Months of the Year; after Josse De Momper; the same that Callot has engraved.
  • The Seven Planets 1581; after Maerten de Vos
  • Four Continents 1588–89; after the same
  • The Four Elements; in four plates, after the same.
  • The Last Judgment; after J. Stradan.
  • St. Hubert; after the same.
  • Twelve plates of Horses; after the same.
  • A Hunting and Fishing Party; after the same.
  • The Israelitish Women singing the Song of Praise for the Destruction of the Egyptian Host in the Red Sea; after the same.
  • A Woman saving her Child from a Lion; after the same.
  • Twelve Landscapes; after Hendrick Van Cleve III.
  • A set of Hermitesses; after M. de Vos; engraved conjointly with his son Hans Collaert.
  • The Calling of St. Andrew to the Apostleship; after Barocci.
  • The Repose in Egypt; after H. Goltzius. 1585.
  • A set of six plates, called the Annunciations; considered among the best of his works.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f Adriaen Collaert in the RKD
  2. ^ a b Adam Jasienski: Thinking visually Gallery guide from the exhibition Paper Worlds: Printing Knowledge in Early Modern Europe, Department of the History of Science at Harvard University.

Attribution:

  • Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainBryan, Michael (1886). "Collaert, Adriaen". In Graves, Robert Edmund (ed.). Bryan's Dictionary of Painters and Engravers (A–K). Vol. I (3rd ed.). London: George Bell & Sons.
  • Adriaen Collaert on Artnet

External links[edit]