PREYER, Johann Wilhelm - b. 1803 Rheydt, d. 1889 Düsseldorf - WGA

PREYER, Johann Wilhelm

(b. 1803 Rheydt, d. 1889 Düsseldorf)

German painter. He studied at the Düsseldorf Kunstakademie (1822-31) and was recognized as a master of genre and flower painting by 1830. In 1835 he studied the Dutch masters at The Hague and Amsterdam; he also went on two study trips to Italy (1840 and 1842). He continued training in Munich and gradually began to expand his early, small-scale landscapes in the manner of Jan Brueghel the Elder by adding still-life motifs. By the mid-1840s he had settled on the formula that won him success: small-scale, pure still-lifes, usually of fruit. Works such as Fruit on a Porcelain Dish (1832; Nationalgalerie, Berlin) moved beyond the constraints of the traditional vanitas still-life to the joy of pure decoration.

His work is notable for its precise drawing, scrupulous detail, fresh colour and brilliant enamel-like texture. He also sometimes used trompe l’oeil effects. His Still-Life with Fruit (1869; Art Museum, Milwaukee) exemplifies the artist’s abiding fascination with close, natural observation. The painting glows with a jewel-like finish enhanced by brilliant glazes. This kind of exquisite craftsmanship established his reputation as the foremost technician of the Düsseldorf school.

His lifelong dedication to improving his work never wavered, though his late years may have witnessed a decline in his powers of concentration. Preyer, whose daughter Emilie Preyer (1849-1930) was a still-life painter, was only 1 m tall, as was his brother, the landscape painter Gustav Preyer (1801-1839).

Still-Life of Grapes
Still-Life of Grapes by

Still-Life of Grapes

Preyer’s style was influenced by 17th- and 18th-century still-life painters such as Abraham Mignon, Willem van Aelst, and Jan van Huysum. His particular specialty was the present type of work: small-scale fruit still-lifes of the utmost refinement, technical precision, and attention to naturalistic detail.

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