Paul Joseph Constantin Gabriel -19th century Dutch Canal landscape -Oil painting
Welcome to my ebay store !Primarily searching for the «Unique & Rare» by dealing with some of the finest acquisitions and consignments of Prominent California Estates, Large Collections and Celebrity homes from Santa Barbara, Beverly Hills, Bell Air, Hollywood Hills,Los Feliz,Malibu, Pasadena, San Marino, Newport Beach, La Jolla and most of the best locations of the fabulous West Coast offering here is a Paul Joseph Constantin Gabriel -19th century Dutch Canal landscape -Oil painting Oi painting on board -Signed -circa 1870s frame size 15 x 12″board size 10 x 7″ Artist Biography Paul Joseph Constantin Gabriel (1828 – 1903) was active/lived in Netherlands, Germany, Holland. He is known for Hague School tonalist landscape painting, drawing, watercolor, etching. Paul Gabriel was a painter, draftsman, watercolorist, and etcher who belonged to the Hague School*.Gabriel was the son of the sculptor and painter, Paul Joseph Gabriel. From 1840 until 1843 he was educated at the State Academy of Fine Arts in Amsterdam, where he was a pupil of Louis Zocher. The following year he went to the German town of Cleves, where Barend Cornelis Koekkoek had founded a drawing academy. Later he returned to the Netherlands and studied with Cornelis Lieste in Haarlem. Here he became acquainted with Anton Mauve, with whom he was to work with often.In 1853 Gabriel moved to Ooosterbeek, also called the ‘Dutch Barbizon’, where landscape painter Johannes Warnardus Bilders had gathered around him many young painters. The members of this group would later become central figures in the Hague School. In 1858, Gabriel introduced Anton Mauve to the area, who would return there ten years in a row and would become good friends with Gerard Bilders, the son of Johannes Warnardus.When Gabriël returned to Amsterdam to live, he had a hard time and moved to Brussels. There he was befriended by Willem Roelofs and benefited from Roelof’s social position in the art world of Brussels. There he met Hendrik Willem Mesdag, also a student of Roelofs.Gabriel was also influenced by the painters of the Barbizon School*, whose works were regularly exhibited in Brussels. Helped by Roeolof’s suggestions, he developed into a good landscape painter, with a clear palette.Gabriel’s paintings stand out from the ‘grey tones’ for which the Hague School was famous because of his clear use of color. His work was less an impression of atmosphere than a consequence of the immediate effect of the sunny Dutch landscape. The more he looked at the Dutch landscape, the more color he perceived in it. He described the Dutch countryside as ‘colorful, juicy, fat’ and said ‘Our land is not grey, even when the weather is grey.’From 1862 onwards, Gabriel regularly embarked on study trips to the Netherlands: first to Arnhem and Oosterbeek, in 1866 to Veenendaal, in the seventies to Abcoude and Vreeland, and from 1875 to the lakes around Nieuwkoop near Noorden. Around 1880, he spent the summers in Kortenhoef, on Kampereiland and in Giethoorn. He visited the places in Overijssel with Willem Bastiaan Tholen. But it was only in 1864 that Gabriel would permanently return to the Netherlands. At that time he moved to Scheveningen, where he bought a house next to his student Geesje Mesdag-van Calcar. Together they painted still lifes with flowers.In this period he often painted the brook near Voorschoten, as well as in Broeksloot (1886), Oosterbeek (ca. 1887), Kinderdijk and Heeze. In 1886, he stayed with the Mesdags at their home in Vries in Drente, where he made studies of the fields, barns and farms. In this period Gabriel also received recognition in the Netherlands. Museums purchased some of his important pieces, including ‘The Pottery in Kampen’, purchased by the Hague Gemeentemuseum in 1890.Gabriel died on 23 August 1903 in his home in Scheveningen. A beautiful piece that will add to your décor! in excellent condition Please check all the photosyou may click on it to enlarge Images should you have any inquiries, please do not hesitate to ask a question or call 310 293 2442