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Artist: Jozef Israëls (Dutch, 1824 – 1911)
Title: The Sewing School at Katwyk
Medium: Antique heliogravure wove paper after the original painting by a master engraver C. D. (19th century).
Year: 1888
Signature: Signed in the plate, lower right.
Condition: Excellent
Dimensions: Image size 7 1/2 x 9 7/8 inches.
Framed dimensions: Approximately 17 x 19 inches. 
Framing: This piece has been professionally matted and framed using all new materials.

Additional notes:
  This is not a modern print. This impression is more than 135 years old. The strike is crisp and the lines are sharp.

Artist Biography:
  Jozef Israëls was a Dutch painter. He was a leading member of the group of landscape painters referred to as the Hague School and was, during his lifetime, "the most respected Dutch artist of the second half of the nineteenth century." He was born in Groningen to Jewish parents. His father, Hartog Abraham Israëls was a money changer and he intended for Jozef to be a businessman. His mother was Mathilda Salomon née Polack, and she hoped that Jozef would become a Rabbi. When he was eleven years old, he attended Minerva Academy in Groningen and he began to study painting. He subsequently continued his studies in Amsterdam, studying at the Royal Academy for Fine Arts which later became the State Academy for Fine Arts in Amsterdam. He was a pupil of Jan Kruseman and attended the drawing class at the academy. From September 1845 until May 1847 he was in Paris, working in the history painter Picot's studio and taking classes at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts under James Pradier, Horace Vernet, and Paul Delaroche. He returned to Amsterdam in September 1845, where he resumed his studies at the Academy until May 1847. Israels remained in Amsterdam until 1870 when he moved to The Hague and became a leading member of the Hague School of landscape painters. Israëls has often been compared to Jean-François Millet. As artists, even more than as painters in the strict sense of the word, they both saw in the life of the poor and humble a motive for expressing with peculiar intensity their wide human sympathy; but Millet was the poet of placid rural life, while in almost all Israëls' pictures there is some piercing note of woe. Edmond Duranty said that they were painted with gloom and suffering. He began with historical and dramatic subjects in the romantic style of the day. After an illness, he went to recuperate his strength at the fishing-town of Zandvoort near Haarlem, and there he was struck by the daily tragedy of life. Henceforth, he was possessed by a new vein of artistic expression, sincerely realistic, full of emotion and pity. Among his more important subsequent works are The Zandvoort Fisherman (in the Amsterdam Gallery), The Silent House (which gained a gold medal at the Brussels Salon, 1858), and Village Poor (a prize at Manchester). In 1862, he achieved great success in London with his The Shipwrecked Mariner, purchased by Mr. Young, and The Cradle, two pictures that the Athenaeum magazine described as the most touching pictures of the exhibition. A portrait of Jozef Israëls was painted by the Scottish painter George Paul Chalmers.



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