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Herman Verelst (1641 in Dordrecht – 1702 in London), was a Dutch Golden Age painter.

John Locke by Herman Verelst
Portrait of an unknown man by Herman Verelst, Rijksmuseum (1667)

Biography

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Herman was the son of Pieter Hermansz Verelst and his wife, who grew up in The Hague. He was the second of three sons who became painters: the other two were Simon and Johannes.

He became a pupil in the Confrerie Pictura in 1663, at the same time as his brother Simon.[1] The brotherhood was founded by his father, who taught all three sons.[2] In 1667 Verelst married, living in Kalverstraat, a woman from Venice, living at Prinsengracht. He had two children baptized in the nearby Westerkerk. In those days he portrayed Johan de Witt (who came from Dordrecht) and his wife Wendela Bicker.[3]

Verelst is known for portraits and still life paintings.[2] He worked in Amsterdam, Italy, Ljubljana, Paris and Vienna before moving to London in 1683, where his brother was very successful.[2] It is suggested Louis Michiel was his pupil.[2] Some of his children, Cornelis and Maria Verelst, also became painters.[2]

Family tree

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Pieter Hermansz Verelst 1618–1678
Herman Verelst 1641–1702Simon Pietersz Verelst 1644–1721?John Verelst 1648–1734
Cornelis Verelst 1667?–1734Maria Verelst 1680–1744William Verelst 1704–1752

References

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  1. ^ AANTEEKENINGEN OMTRENT EENIGE DORDRECHTSCHE SCHILDERS DOOR G. H. VETH. XXXIX. PIETER HERMANSZ. VERELST EN ZIJNE ZONEN (1875)
  2. ^ a b c d e Herman Verelst, RKD
  3. ^ Haak, B. “Johan De Witt en Wendela Bicker??” Bulletin Van Het Rijksmuseum, vol. 14, no. 3, 1966, pp. 117–118. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/40342152. Accessed 22 Aug. 2021.
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