Jan Hillebrand Wijsmuller
Jan Hillebrand Wijsmuller was a Dutch painter. He belongs to The 2. Golden Age of Dutch Painting.
Portrait of Jan Hillebrand Wijsmuller by H. M. Krabbé in 1894.
Market at the Noorderkerk (North Church), Amsterdam
Review of the fishing traps
Jan Hillebrand Wijsmuller in his studio early 1925
August Allebé was an artist and teacher from the Northern Netherlands.
His early paintings were in a romantic style, but in his later work he was an exponent of realism and impressionism. He was a major initiator and promoter of Amsterdam Impressionism, the artist's association St. Lucas, and the movement of the Amsterdamse Joffers. Amsterdam Impressionism – sometimes referred to by art historians as the School of Allebé – was the counterflow to the very strong Hague School in the movement of Dutch Impressionism.
As a professor at the Royal Academy of Amsterdam he fostered a cosmopolitan attitude toward art and the promotion and motivation of his students, and provided a significant stimulus to developments in modern art.
Portrait by Hendrik Maarten Krabbé
Portrait by Allebé of Johannes Luden, 1868, collection Teylers Museum
Floris Arntzenius (1874/1925): Market with flower stalls, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam
Nicolaas Bastert (1890): Vechtlandschap