Difference between revisions of "Albert Cuyp"

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(Created page with "Albert Cuyp <ref name="term_71495" /> <p> A celebrated Dutch landscape-painter, son of Jacob Cuyp, commonly called Old Cuyp, also a landscapist, born at Dort; painted sce...")
 
 
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Albert Cuyp <ref name="term_71495" />  
 
<p> A celebrated Dutch landscape-painter, son of [[Jacob]] Cuyp, commonly called Old Cuyp, also a landscapist, born at Dort; painted scenes from the banks of the [[Meuse]] and the Rhine; is now reckoned a rival of Claude, though he was not so in his lifetime, his pictures selling now for a high price; he has been praised for his sunlights, but these, along with Claude's, have been pronounced depreciatively by Ruskin as "colourless" (1605-1691). </p>
Albert Cuyp <ref name="term_71495" />
==References ==
<p> A celebrated Dutch landscape-painter, son of Jacob Cuyp, commonly called Old Cuyp, also a landscapist, born at Dort; painted scenes from the banks of the [[Meuse]] and the Rhine; is now reckoned a rival of Claude, though he was not so in his lifetime, his pictures selling now for a high price; he has been praised for his sunlights, but these, along with Claude's, have been pronounced depreciatively by Ruskin as "colourless" (1605-1691). </p>
 
== References ==
<references>
<references>
<ref name="term_71495"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/the-nuttall-encyclopedia/cuyp,+albert Albert Cuyp from The Nuttall Encyclopedia]</ref>
<ref name="term_71495"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/the-nuttall-encyclopedia/cuyp,+albert Albert Cuyp from The Nuttall Encyclopedia]</ref>
</references>
</references>

Latest revision as of 17:11, 15 October 2021

Albert Cuyp [1]

A celebrated Dutch landscape-painter, son of Jacob Cuyp, commonly called Old Cuyp, also a landscapist, born at Dort; painted scenes from the banks of the Meuse and the Rhine; is now reckoned a rival of Claude, though he was not so in his lifetime, his pictures selling now for a high price; he has been praised for his sunlights, but these, along with Claude's, have been pronounced depreciatively by Ruskin as "colourless" (1605-1691).

References