Cornelis Bega | |
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Self-portrait |
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Birth name | Cornelis Pietersz Bega |
Born | c. 1631-2 Haarlem, Netherlands |
Died | August 27, 1664 |
Nationality | Nederland |
Field | Painting, Engraving |
Movement | Baroque |
Cornelis Pietersz Bega, or Cornelis Pietersz Begijn (Haarlem, Netherlands 1631/1632–27 August 1664) was a Dutch painter and engraver.
He lived and worked in Haarlem and was the son of sculptor and goldsmith Pieter Jansz. Begijn. His mother Maria was the daughter of the Haarlem painter Cornelis van Haarlem. He assumed the name Bega when he started working professionally. He was a student of Adriaen van Ostade, and produced genre scenes of similar subjects, typically groups of a few peasant figures, often in interior settings, or fanciful figures such as The Alchemist (Malibu) or The Astrologer (London).
From 1653 to 1654 he traveled by horse and boat on a Grand Tour with fellow painters Dirk Helmbreker, Vincent van der Vinne and Guillam Dubois through Germany, Switzerland and France. This trip was recorded in Vincent van der Vinne's diaries and gives an accurate view of the art in the cities they visited in those times.[1] His dated works begin in 1652, and in 1654 he was accepted into the Haarlem Guild of St. Luke, dying only ten years later, possibly of the plague.[2]