Daniël Schellinks[lower-alpha 1] (baptized 11 November 1627 – buried 23 September 1701) was a Dutch silk trader and amateur painter and draughtsman of Italianate landscapes and marine scenes.[1][2]
Life
Daniël Schellinks was born in Amsterdam as the younger brother of Willem Schellinks. Little is known about Schellinks' life, training or artistic development. While his brother trained as an artist and specialised in atmospheric Italianate pictures, Schellinks does not appear to have had a formal artistic training.[2] Both Schellinks brothers visited Italy. When Schellinks married in 1662, he called himself the owner of a clothier's business.[3]
Work
Only a few works are definitively attributed to Daniël Schellinks. They are almost all based on works by his elder brother Willem. Schellinks' profession was a silk trader and he was only an amateur artist. It is believed that many of his works have been wrongly attributed to other artists.[2]
Schellinks and his brother Willem form part of the Dutch landscape and genre artists active in the 16th and 17th centuries who depicted Italian scenes, either real or imaginary.[2] They are referred to as the 'Italianates'.[4] They were influenced by Italian models and attempted to capture the Mediterranean light through a colourful style of painting with delicate atmospheric effects. While a number of the Italianates visited and even worked in Italy, some never did but relied for their Italianate scenes on the works of artists who had in fact been there and had brought the Italianate style to their native country upon their return.[2] The Dutch architectural painter Jan van der Heyden, for instance, likely never visited Italy but is believed to have used some of Daniël Schellinks' drawings for his Italianate paintings.[5] Like his brother, Daniël also painted a few marine scenes.[6]
Notes
- ↑ alternatively spelled Schellincks, Schellinger, or Schellinx
References
- ↑ Daniël Schellinks at the Netherlands Institute for Art History (in Dutch)
- 1 2 3 4 5 Daniel Schellinks, River Landscape with Ford and Hunting Company at the Liechtenstein Museum
- ↑ Daniël Schellinks, The Ponte Lucano near Tivoli at Master Prints
- ↑ Sheila D. Muller, Dutch Art: An Encyclopedia, Routledge, 4 July 2013, p. 401
- ↑ Peter C. Sutton, et al., Jan van der Heyden (1637–1712) (exhibit catalogue), Yale University Press, 2006, p. 176
- ↑ Daniël Schellinks at the National Maritime Museum
External links
- Media related to Daniël Schellinks at Wikimedia Commons