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Cornelis Ploos van Amstel

Dutch painter From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cornelis Ploos van Amstel
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Cornelis Ploos van Amstel (1726, in Weesp 1798, in Amsterdam), was an eighteenth-century Dutch painter and art collector.

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Portrait of Cornelis Ploos van Amstel, by George van der Mijn, c.1758

Biography

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Etching by Ploos van Amstel, with colored pencil after Adriaen van Ostade, ca. 1765-1782, collection Teylers Museum

According to the RKD, he was a pupil of Norbert van Bloemen and Jacobus Buys, and later became a member of the Amsterdam artist society Arte et Amicitia (De Kunstkrans).[1] He is mostly known as a collector and copyist of 17th-century artists.[1] He married Elisabeth Troost, the daughter of Cornelis Troost. His pupils were Christina Chalon, William V, Prince of Orange, Elisabeth van Woensel, and Hermanus Petrus Schouten.[1] According to Van der Aa he kept an art cabinet with over 5,000 drawings, including many by Rembrandt. In 1800 his collection was auctioned (without the Rembrandts, which were auctioned later) for the enormous sum of 109,406 guilders.[2]

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Works

He was not only a patron of the arts, he was also active as a teacher and writer of instructional materials. He attended lectures at the Athenaeum Illustre of Amsterdam and wrote the original report of the lectures of Petrus Camper on the facial angle. Together with Reinier Vinkeles, Jacob Houbraken, Jan de Beijer, and Caspar Jacobsz Philips, he illustrated a new atlas of Amsterdam.[1][3] Together with Jacob van der Schley, he made a catalog of the art in the Amsterdam City Hall, with short biographical sketches of all the artists involved.[1][4]

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References

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