ROESTRAETEN, Pieter Gerritsz. van - b. ~1630 Haarlem, d. 1698 Haarlem - WGA

ROESTRAETEN, Pieter Gerritsz. van

(b. ~1630 Haarlem, d. 1698 Haarlem)

Dutch painter, active in England. From 1646, when he entered the Guild of St Luke in Haarlem as a portrait painter, until 1651, he was apprenticed to Frans Hals, whose daughter, Adriaentje Hals, he married in 1654. Sometime between 1663 and 1665 he and Adriaentje went to London. Van Roestraeten was one of the more successful of the many Dutch painters who tried to make a living in England during the late seventeenth century. Peter Lely, apparently afraid of competition in the field of portraiture, offered to introduce van Roestraten to Charles II on the condition that he ceased painting portraits. Van Roestraten presumably kept his promise, for there are no further known portraits, other than self-portraits.

Although he never achieved the degree of fame enjoyed by Sir Peter Lely or Sir Godfrey Kneller, there was a demand for his work, and his pictures fetched high prices, enabling him to remain in London for more than thirty years until his death in 1700.

Still-Life with Chinese Teabowls
Still-Life with Chinese Teabowls by

Still-Life with Chinese Teabowls

It is noteworthy that every element of this still-life is mirrored by the gleaming surface of the table. Tea, with tobacco, was among the major Dutch imports, the Netherlands by then being the most far-flung of colonial trading empires.

Vanitas
Vanitas by

Vanitas

Pieter van Roestraeten was a Dutch genre and still-life painter. He, and Vincent van der Vinne, a Haarlem painter best known for his still-lifes, are the only documented students of Frans Hals. However, not a trace of their contact with him is evident in their works. Van Roestraeten married Adriaentje, Frans Hals’s daughter of his second marriage.

Vanitas Still-Life
Vanitas Still-Life by

Vanitas Still-Life

Van Roestraeten portrayed silver objects in most of his still-lifes. Highly-wrought silver was rare, fashionable and rather expensive in England in the second half of the 17th century. Silver was the gift of choice at the court of King Charles II, the most frequent recipients being the beauties with whom the King took innocent pleasures.

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