Henriette Ronner-Knip
The Young Artist
Cat nap
Making music
A Yorkshire Terrier
A Sleeping Cat
A German Wirehaired Pointer
Two Kittens Sitting On A Cushion
The Proud Mother
Two Kittens In A Basket
A Dog And Her Puppies
An Inquisitive Kitten
Mother's Pride 2
The Globertrotters
Sleepy Kittens
Kittens Game
Mother's Pride
Two Kittens
Three Kittens With A Casket And Blue Ribbon
A Kitten With A Ball Of Wool
A Litter Of Pugs
Cart Dog At Rest
Cat With Kittens
Curiosity
Kittens at play
Henriëtte Ronner-Knip (31 May 1821, Amsterdam – 28 February 1909, Ixelles) was a Dutch-Belgian artist in the Romantic style who is best known for her animal paintings; especially cats.
Biography
She was born into a family of artists and she received her first lessons from her father, Josephus Augustus Knip, who also gave lessons to her aunt (his youngest sister), Henriëtte Geertruida Knip. His father, Nicolaas (1741-1808), was an artist as well. Some sources indicate that her mother was Pauline Rifer de Courcelles, a painter of birds, who was her father's first wife but, at the time of her birth, they were apparently separated and he was living with his mistress, Cornelia van Leeuwen (1790-1848), who is also credited with being Henriëtte's mother.[1]
Cart Dog at Rest
The family moved often as her father found work giving lessons. But, by 1823, her father was already blind in one eye. The following year, he and Pauline were finally divorced and he married Cornelia. After he became totally blind in 1832, the family continued to move about, staying for a short time in The Hague, then Beek and 's-Hertogenbosch before settling in Berlicum in 1840.[2] By this time, she was essentially in charge of the family's finances and legal obligations, and had begun painting seriously by 1835. She was a participant in the Exhibition of Living Masters in 1838.[1]
After Cornelia's death, she moved to Amsterdam where she painted farms, animals and forests from nature; first in watercolor, then in oils. That same year, she became the first woman admitted as an "active member" to Arti et Amicitiae.[1] In 1850, she married Feico Ronner (1819-1883) and they moved to Brussels. He was often ill and could not be regularly employed, so he became her manager.[2] At this time, she narrowed her subject matter, focusing almost entirely on dogs and cats. After 1870, she painted her most famous works, featuring long-haired, often playful cats in bourgeois settings. She continued to paint dogs too; notably lapdogs belonging to Marie Henriette of Austria and Princess Marie of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen.[1]
In her later years, she had a house with a large garden, where she kept hunting dogs, cats and a parrot that she used as models. After observing them in her studio, she would make paper sculptures in the desired poses and set them together with props, such as furniture and fabrics. She occasionally collaborated with the genre artist, David Col.
In 1887, she was awarded the Order of Leopold and, in 1901, became a member of the Order of Orange-Nassau.[2] Her son Alfred and daughters Alice and Emma also became artists. She often exhibited with them.[1]
Works
Kitten's Game
Contentment
Kittens at Play
Cat Resting
References
Brief biography @ Huygens/Resources.
Brief biography @ the Rehs Galleries.
Further reading
Henry Havard, Un peintre de chats. Madame Henriette Ronner, Boussod, 1892.
Marion Harry Spielman, Henriëtte Ronner, the painter of Cat Life and Cat Character, Century-Crofts, 1893.
Fransje Kuyvenhoven, Ronald Peeters, De familie Knip: drie generaties kunstenaars uit Noord-Brabant, Waanders, 1988.
Harry Kraaij, Henriette Ronner-Knip, 1821-1909: een virtuoos dierschilderes, Scriptum Signature, 1998 ISBN 90-559-4081-X
External links
Ronner-Knip and her paintings @ The Great Cat
Henriëtte Ronner-Knip @ CurioCafe
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