Victor Honoré Janssens
Victor Honorius Janssens (or Honoré, or Jansens) (11 June 1658 - 14 August 1736) was a painter from Brabant.
Janssens was born in Brussels. After seven years in the studio of an obscure painter named Volders, he spent four years in the household of the duke of Holstein. The next eleven years Janssens passed in Rome, where he took eager advantage of all the aids to artistic srudy, and formed an intimacy with Antonio Tempesta, in whose landscapes he frequently inserted figures.
Rising into popularity, he painted a large number of cabinet historical scenes; but, on his return to Brussels, the claims of his increasing family restricted him almost entirely to the larger and more lucrative size of picture, of which very many of the churches and palaces of the Netherlands contain examples. In 1718 Janssens was invited to Vienna, where he stayed three years, and was made painter to the emperor. The statement that he visited England is based only upon the fact that certain fashionable interiors of the time in that country have been attributed to him. Janssens coloring was good, his touch delicate and his taste refined. He died in Brussels.
References
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- Victor Honoré Janssens at the Netherlands Institute for Art History
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