Henri van der Haert

Henri van der Haert/Hendrik van der Haert/Henri Anne Victoria van der Haert (17901846)[1] was a Belgian portrait painter, sculptor, illustrator and engraver.

Tête de noir

He was born in Louvain, and was a student at the Academy of Leuven under Josse-Pieter Geedts (1770–1834), who gave him his first lessons in painting. He also studied with the portraitist François Xavier Joseph Jacquin (1756–1826). In 1818, returning from a trip to Paris, he decided to settle in Brussels. He attended classes with Jacques-Louis David and worked in the studio of the sculptor François Rude. He was given some projects of architectural drawings and decorative ornaments for the castle of Tervuren. In 1819, he made bas-reliefs in grisaille for the halls of the Concert Noble in Brussels. He attended a school of drawing, before being appointed in 1836 as professor at the then newly founded Royal School of Engraving in Brussels. He directed the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Ghent from 1841 until his death, teaching among others, Liévin De Winne (1821–1880).[2] His work includes a large number of portraits, drawn and lithographed, and engravings from the works of contemporary artists. He was a protégé of the family d'Arenberg. He died in Ghent.

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