Alexander Van Gaelen
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Alexander van Gaelen (1670-1728), who was born at
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, was the scholar of
Jan van Huchtenburgh J(oh)an and Jacob van Huchtenburg (also known as Hughtenburg or Hugtenburg(h)) were two Dutch Golden Age painters in the second half of the seventeenth century. Both brothers were natives of Haarlem, moved to Paris, but died in Amsterdam. The main ...
, and, like his master, painted battles and subjects of the chase, which he treated with great fire and spirit. Whilst he was a pupil of Huchtenburgh, he had an opportunity of improving his touch by copying the works of Wouwerman,
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, and other eminent masters, as his instructor was a dealer in pictures as well as a painter; and he was perhaps more indebted to this circumstance, than to the lessons of Huchtenburgh. He soon found himself able to dispense with further instruction, and, resolving on visiting other countries in search of improvement, went to Germany, where he passed some time at
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, in the employment of the
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. After a few years passed in Germany he returned to Holland, where, not meeting with the encouragement he expected, he did not long remain, but determined to visit England, whither some of his pictures had preceded him. He accordingly came to this country in the reign of Queen Anne, and is said to have painted a picture of Her Majesty in a coach drawn by eight horses, and attended by several of the nobility. He also painted three pictures, representing two of the principal battles between the Royal Army and that of the
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in the time of
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, and the ''Battle of the Boyne.'' No mention, however, is made of Van Gaelen in Walpole's ''Anecdotes.'' He died in 1728.


References

* 1670 births 1728 deaths 18th-century Dutch painters 18th-century Dutch male artists Dutch male painters Painters from Amsterdam {{Netherlands-painter-stub