ART

Buy Fine Art

Ludolph Büsinck

Illustrations

Ludolph Büsinck

Bearded beggar with floor, feet apart

Ludolph Büsinck Bearded beggar with a stick and Bag

Ludolph Büsinck

Peasant with a hoe, basket and hen

Ludolph Büsinck Beggar with a stick in the profile

Ludolph Büsinck Beggar with a stick and jug

Ludolph Büsinck The lute player

Ludolph Büsinck The Holy Family

Ludolph Büsinck The Holy Family

Ludolph Büsinck Virtue, defeated by the vice

Ludolph Büsinck Series of "Christ and the Twelve Apostles," Christ as Salvator Mundi

Ludolph Büsinck Kavalier and beggars

Ludolph Büsinck Maid with Fruit Basket

Ludolph Büsinck Madonna with Nimbus

Ludolph Büsinck Woman Sewing

Ludolph Büsinck Standing gentleman with hat

Ludolph Büsinck Standing gentleman without a hat

Ludolph Büsinck Two beggars fighting

Ludolph Büsinck Two beggars and a child

Ludolph Büsinck (c.1600–1669)[1] was a German painter and wood-engraver, born at Hann. Münden in the 1590s. He was working in Paris between 1623 and 1630, where he produced a series of chiaoscuro woodcuts, the first to be made in France [2] His name is sometimes spelled "Buesinck".

Life

Büsinck was born at Hann. Münden in central Germany between 1599 and 1602, a son of Johann Büsinck and his wife, Kunigunde Voss.[3] He married Katharina Ludwig, with whom, according to baptismal records, he had six children.[3] He may have trained as an artist in the Netherlands.[4]

Between 1623 and 1630 he is known to have been in Paris, where he made a number of dated chiaroscuro prints, some of which were published by Melchior Tavernier.[4] They are boldly cut works in the tradition of the Dutch printmaker Hendrick Goltzius.[5] He was the first artist to make chiaroscuro woodcuts in France, and most his works in this technique were based on drawings by the painter Georges Lallemand,[6] although one, probably his first, is after a painting by Abraham Bloemaert.[5] He is not known to have made any woodcuts after 1630.[4]

He returned to Hann. Münden, where he became a member of the merchants' guild (Kaufmannsgilde) in 1639. He is known to have been active as a painter in the 1630s, his works including an altarpiece for the high altar of the church of St John in Göttingen.[4] In 1647 he is recorded as acting as a customs official.[4]

He died at Münden on 15 January 1669.[4]


Works

His prints include religious subjects, and images of cavaliers,peasants, musicians and beggars.[2][4]


Bibliography

Hollstein, F W H, Dutch And Flemish Etchings, Engravings And Woodcuts c.1450-1700, Amsterdam, 1949
Strauss, Walter L, Chiaroscuro: The Clair-Obscur Woodcuts By The German And Netherlandish Masters Of The XVI And XVII Centuries, London, Thames & Hudson, 1973
Roethlisberger, Marcel Roethlisberger, Marcel G, Abraham Bloemaert and His Sons: Paintings And Prints, 2 vols, Ghent, 1993
Stechow, Wolfgang Ludolph Buesinck The Print Collector’s Quarterly 1938 Dec Vol 25, No. 4, p393
Stechow, Wolfgang Catalogue of the Woodcuts by Ludolph Buesinck The Print Collector’s Quarterly 1939 Oct Vol 26, No. 3, p349

External links

www.artistarchive.com A catalogue of more than 35 prints by Büsinck with reference numbers, many with images.

Notes

Stechow, Wolfgang "Catalogue of the Woodcuts by Ludolph Buesinck" Print Collectors Quarterly October 1939, Vol 26, No. 3, p349
Bryan,1886-9
Gealt, Adelheid M. , Beyond Black & White: Chiaroscuro Prints from Indiana Collections , Indiana University Art Museum, 1989
Wegner, Wolfgang (1957). "Büsinck, Ludolph". Neue Deutsche Biographie 3. p. 4.
Washton, Rose-Carol; Ward, John L. "The Seventeenth Century: Tradition and Experiment". Yale Art Gallery Bulletin. 27/28: 19–23.
"St. Matthias, 1623-30". Cleveland Museum of Art. Retrieved 24 October 2013.

----

Fine Art Prints | Greeting Cards | Phone Cases | Lifestyle | Face Masks | Men's , Women' Apparel | Home Decor | jigsaw puzzles | Notebooks | Tapestries | ...

----

Artist, Germany

Artist

A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M -
N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z

Paintings, List

Zeichnungen, Gemälde

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/"
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

World

Index

Hellenica World - Scientific Library