Όττο φαν Φέιν: Διαφορά μεταξύ των αναθεωρήσεων

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Γραμμή 4:
 
==Βιογραφία==
[[File:Otto van Veen.jpg|thumb|''ChristΟ inΙησούς theστην Houseοικία ofΜάρθας Marthaκαι and MaryΜαρίας'', ''c''περ. 1597]]
[[File:ANTW MAAGD van Zurenborg018.jpg|thumb|TryptichΤρίπτυχο ofτης theπροσκύνησης Adoration,με τις Doña Anna Ximenes ofτης AragonΑραγονίας andκαι dona Gracia Rodriguez deτης EvoraΕβόρα]]
Ο φαν Φέιν γεννήθηκε στο Λέιντεν περί το 1556 Ο πατέρας του, Κορνέλις Γιανς φαν Φέιν ήταν Δήμαρχος της πόλης, ενώ μητέρα του ήταν η Χέιρτράουντ Σίμονς φαν Νεκ.<ref name=rkd>[https://rkd.nl/en/explore/artists/record?query=Otto+van+Veen&start=0 Otto van Veen στο [[Ολλανδικό Ίδρυμα Ιστορίας της Τέχνης]] ([[RKD]])</ref><ref name="Van de Velde">Van de Velde.</ref> Πιθανότατα διετέλεσε μαθητής του [[Ίσαακ φαν Σβάνενμπουρχ]] ως τον Οκτώβριο του 1672, οπότε η ρωμαιοκαθολική οικογένειά του μετοίκησε στην [[Αμβέρσα]] και στη συνέχεια στη [[Λιέγη]].
 
Van Veen was born in Leiden around 1556, where his father, Cornelis Jansz. van Veen (1519–1591), had been [[Burgomaster]].<ref name="Van de Velde">Van de Velde.</ref> !--He probably was a pupil of [[Isaac Claesz van Swanenburg]] until October 1572, when the [[Roman Catholicism|Catholic]] family moved to Antwerp, and then to [[Liège]]. He studied for a time under [[Dominicus Lampsonius]] and [[Jean Ramey]], before traveling to [[Rome]] around 1574 or 1575. He stayed there for about five years, perhaps studying with [[Federico Zuccari]]. [[Carel van Mander]] relates that van Veen then worked at the courts of [[Rudolf II]] in [[Prague]] and [[William V of Bavaria]] in [[Munich]], before returning to the [[Low Countries]].<ref name=Mander>{{Link language|nl}} Middle Dutch[http://www.dbnl.org/tekst/mand001schi01_01/mand001schi01_01_0268.htm Octavio van Veen] in [[Karel van Mander]]'s ''Schilderboeck'', 1604, courtesy of the [[Digital library for Dutch literature]]</ref> In Brussels, he was [[court painter]] to the governor of the [[Southern Netherlands]], [[Alexander Farnese, Duke of Parma]] until 1592, and then active in Antwerp.
 
 
<!-- ==Life==
[[File:Otto van Veen.jpg|thumb|''Christ in the House of Martha and Mary'', ''c''. 1597]]
[[File:ANTW MAAGD van Zurenborg018.jpg|thumb|Tryptich of the Adoration, Doña Anna Ximenes of Aragon and dona Gracia Rodriguez de Evora]]
Van Veen was born in Leiden around 1556, where his father, Cornelis Jansz. van Veen (1519–1591), had been [[Burgomaster]].<ref name="Van de Velde">Van de Velde.</ref> He probably was a pupil of [[Isaac Claesz van Swanenburg]] until October 1572, when the [[Roman Catholicism|Catholic]] family moved to Antwerp, and then to [[Liège]]. He studied for a time under [[Dominicus Lampsonius]] and [[Jean Ramey]], before traveling to [[Rome]] around 1574 or 1575. He stayed there for about five years, perhaps studying with [[Federico Zuccari]]. [[Carel van Mander]] relates that van Veen then worked at the courts of [[Rudolf II]] in [[Prague]] and [[William V of Bavaria]] in [[Munich]], before returning to the [[Low Countries]].<ref name=Mander>{{Link language|nl}} Middle Dutch[http://www.dbnl.org/tekst/mand001schi01_01/mand001schi01_01_0268.htm Octavio van Veen] in [[Karel van Mander]]'s ''Schilderboeck'', 1604, courtesy of the [[Digital library for Dutch literature]]</ref> In Brussels, he was [[court painter]] to the governor of the [[Southern Netherlands]], [[Alexander Farnese, Duke of Parma]] until 1592, and then active in Antwerp.
 
After becoming a master in the [[Guild of St. Luke]] in 1593, van Veen took numerous commissions for church decorations, including altarpieces for the [[Cathedral of Our Lady, Antwerp|Antwerp cathedral]] and a chapel in the [[Antwerp City Hall|city hall]]. He also organized his studio and workshop, which included Rubens. Van Veen's connection to Brussels remained, however, and when [[Archduke Ernest of Austria]] became governor in 1594, he may have aided the archduke in acquiring important Netherlandish paintings by the likes of [[Hieronymus Bosch]] and [[Pieter Bruegel the Elder]].<ref>Bertini (1998): 119.</ref> The artist later served as dean in two prominent organizations in the city, the Guild of St. Luke in 1602, and the [[Guild of Romanists|Romanists]] in 1606.