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Ferdinand Karel Adolf Constantijn Leenhoff (24 May 1841 – 25 April 1914) was a Dutch painter and sculptor.[1]
Life
editHe was born in Zaltbommel to Carolus Antonius Leenhoff (1807–1878), a carillonneur and music professor, and Martina Adriana Johanna Ilcken (1807–1876). Around 1847, Ferdinand, his mother and some of his siblings moved to Paris to live with Ferdinand's grandmother. There he was pupil of Alphonse François.[2] There his sister Suzanne met and later married the painter Édouard Manet, in the centre of whose Le Déjeuner sur l'herbe (1863) Leenhoff appears.
Leenhoff studied under Joseph Mezzara in Paris, with Mezzara later marrying Leenhoff's sister Mathilde. He later returned to the Netherlands and from 1890 to 1899 taught at Amsterdam's Rijksakademie van beeldende kunsten, before dying in Nice in 1914.
Selected works
edit- Paris, cimetière de Passy : Bust of Édouard Manet, bronze, on the painter's grave.[3][4]
- Amsterdam, Thorbeckeplein : Monument to Johan Rudolf Thorbecke, 1876.
- Hoorn : Monument to Jan Pieterszoon Coen, 1887.
- Utrecht, Domplein, in front of the Academiegebouw : Monument to Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands, 1892.
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Monument to Jan Pieterszoon Coen (1887), Hoorn.
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Bust of Édouard Manet, cimetière de Passy, Paris
References
edit- ^ "Bénézit entry". doi:10.1093/benz/9780199773787.article.B00106485. Archived from the original on 2021-04-04. Retrieved 2024-04-07.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link). - ^ Ferdinand Leenhoff | British Museum
- ^ (in French) Sépulture de Manet au cimetière de Passy, on landrucimetières.fr, accessed 11 May 2014.
- ^ (in French) Entry on tombes-sepultures.com.