VERHAGHEN, Pieter Jozef - b. 1728 Aarschot, d. 1811 Leuven - WGA

VERHAGHEN, Pieter Jozef

(b. 1728 Aarschot, d. 1811 Leuven)

Flemish decorative painter who continued in the 18th century the historical painting in the 17th-century style. He remained faithful to Rubens’s conception of art down to the 19th century. His main works are the Feast of Belshazzar (Musées Royaux, Brussels) and the Presentation in the Temple (Ghent Museum, 1767).

Hagar and Ishmael Banished by Abraham
Hagar and Ishmael Banished by Abraham by

Hagar and Ishmael Banished by Abraham

A series of recent studies has led to something of a new attitude towards Flemish painting in the 18th century. Until fairly recently, the art of this period was considered to be rather inferior, despite the high artistic output, because of its perceived lack of innovation. On the one hand, Flemish artists of the 18th century continued to live off the inheritance of Rubens, whose art seemed unsurpassable. Artists such as Pieter Jozef Verhaghen worked entirely in the tradition of Rubens, and although he spent a few years in Italy, there are few traces of this in his work. His Hagar and Ishmael banished by Abraham, painted for the abbey at Tongerlo, has all the outward characteristics of a baroque painting, but lacks Rubens expressiveness. Meanwhile, other artists had fallen under the spell of France with its trend-setting rococo artists. This development was, however, rather out of character with Flemish artistic tradition.

The Presentation in the Temple
The Presentation in the Temple by

The Presentation in the Temple

The Baroque tradition, with its monumental compositions for churches and public buildings, persisted in the Southern Netherlands in the work of Pieter Jozef Verhaghen, court painter to Maria Theresa. His large altarpiece, The Presentation in the Temple, came from the former Dominican Church in Ghent.

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