Cornelis Springer
Cornelis Springer (1817, Amsterdam – 1891, Hilversum), was a Dutch 19th century landscape painter.
Biography
He was a pupil of his father, the carpenter Willem Springer (1778–1857). He was a pupil of Hendrik Gerrit ten Cate, Kasparus Karsen, and Jacobus van der Stok.[1] He became a member of the Amsterdam painters collective Felix Meritis and won a gold medal for a painting of a church interior in 1847.[1] He is known for watercolors, etchings, and drawings, especially of city views and town scenes that he sketched while traveling around the country.[1] He was awarded the Leopold order of Belgium in 1865, and in 1878 he was invited with Jozef Israëls to advise the Dutch Ministry of Public Affairs on the plans for the Rijksmuseum.[1]
His son Leonard Springer became a landscape architect.
- Grote of Sint-Michaëlskerk in Zwolle (1862)
- Sint-Maartenskerk, Zaltbommel
- Lübeck Town Hall in 1885 by Cornelis Springer
- Harbor of Middelburg (1859), Teylers Museum
- The "Atheneum Illustre" on the Oudezijds Voorburgwal in Amsterdam (1879), Teylers Museum
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