VEEN, Otto van - b. 1556 Leiden, d. 1629 Brussel - WGA

VEEN, Otto van

(b. 1556 Leiden, d. 1629 Brussel)

Flemish painter. From c. 1575 to c. 1580 he was in Italy where he was a pupil of Federico Zuccaro, and after working in various places in Germany and Flanders he settled in Antwerp in 1592. He was an uninspired Mannerist painter, but he had a successful career by modelling his work on Italian masters such as Correggio and Parmigianino (The Mystic Marriage of St Catherine, Musées Royaux, Brussels, 1589). His love of Italian art and his scholarly inclinations (he often Latinized his name to Octavio Vaenius) must have been appreciated by Rubens, who had his final training in van Veen’s studio. It was also van Veen who advised Rubens to go to Italy in 1600.

A Lady Bitten by a Parrot
A Lady Bitten by a Parrot by

A Lady Bitten by a Parrot

Albert VII, Archduke of Austria
Albert VII, Archduke of Austria by

Albert VII, Archduke of Austria

Albert VII (1559-1621) was the ruling Archduke of Austria for a few months in 1619 and, jointly with his wife, Isabella Clara Eugenia, sovereign of the Habsburg Netherlands between 1598 and 1621. Prior to this, he had been a cardinal, archbishop of Toledo, viceroy of Portugal and Governor General of the Habsburg Netherlands.

Distribution of Herring and White Bread during the Siege of Leiden
Distribution of Herring and White Bread during the Siege of Leiden by

Distribution of Herring and White Bread during the Siege of Leiden

The artist depicts a scene which occurred on 3 October 1574 after the Water Beggars raised the siege of Leiden during the revolt against Spanish in the Netherlands.

Emblem
Emblem by

Emblem

Diligent males studying at night or in early morning appear in seventeenth-century emblems, such as that shown here. It is from “Quinti Horatii Flacci emblemata,” published in 1607 in Antwerp. The image contrasts a virtuous, attentive man with his sleepy counterpart, whose torpor has been induced by dissipation .

Lycurgus Demonstrares the Importance of Education
Lycurgus Demonstrares the Importance of Education by

Lycurgus Demonstrares the Importance of Education

This print appeared in the emblem book ‘Emblemata Horatiana’, conceived as a mirror for princes. The best known edition was published in 1646, with the Lycurgus emblem as a frontispiece. The book was dedicated by van Veen to the queen mother of France expressing the hope that it would be useful for the education of the young Louis XIV.

Portrait of Nicolaas Rockox
Portrait of Nicolaas Rockox by

Portrait of Nicolaas Rockox

Nicolaas Rockox (1560-1640) was the burgomaster (mayor) of Antwerp. His fame is largely attributed to his friendship to Rubens and the commissions he gave to this artist. His 17th-century patrician is housing a fine collection of Flemish art.

The Artist Painting, Surrounded by his Family
The Artist Painting, Surrounded by his Family by

The Artist Painting, Surrounded by his Family

In this early work a typically sixteenth-century spirit, the ‘concordantia familialis’ is illustrated within the context of a wide family circle. Great variation in pose and gestures enlivens this group portrait.

The Last Supper
The Last Supper by

The Last Supper

Jesus and his disciples take their meal in a room with columns, oil-lamps, a sofa and an amphora that give it a classical feel. A glowing light in the dark background illuminates the Bible.

The artist shows the moment at which Christ blesses the bread and wine before his agitated disciples. Christ has just suggested that one of them would betray him. They began to be distressed and to say to him one after another, ‘Surely, not I?’ To the viewer, however, it is clear that the man who turns away from the group as his wine is poured and who secretively clutches a purse is the traitor Judas.

The painting originally served as an altarpiece in a chapel devoted to the Eucharist. It is considered to be one of Van Veen masterpieces.

The Triumph of Wisdom over Fortune
The Triumph of Wisdom over Fortune by

The Triumph of Wisdom over Fortune

The male figure in this work is identifiable as Hercules by his club. The Medusa shield he holds is the attribute of Minerva, goddess of wisdom, and the female figure is identifiable as Fortune by her cornucopia, thus bearing out the inscription, lower right: Sapienzia Fortuna uictricx.

Xantippe Dousing Socrates
Xantippe Dousing Socrates by

Xantippe Dousing Socrates

This engraving is an illustration in the Emblemata Horatiana published in 1607 by Otto Veen.

Feedback