Cornelis Dusart PRICE CHARTS
1660 Haarlem - 1704. Known for: Figure, genre painting.
The son of the organist of Saint Bavo in Haarlem, Cornelis Dusart became one of the last and most celebrated pupils of Adriaen van Ostade, taking over his master's studio after his death in 1685.... Read full biography
The son of the organist of Saint Bavo in Haarlem, Cornelis Dusart became one of the last and most celebrated pupils of Adriaen van Ostade, taking over his master's studio after his death in 1685. Ostade left a number of unfinished paintings behind, some of which Dusart completed and the experience... Read full biography
The son of the organist of Saint Bavo in Haarlem, Cornelis Dusart became one of the last and most celebrated pupils of Adriaen van Ostade, taking over his master's studio after his death in 1685. Ostade left a number of unfinished paintings behind, some of which Dusart completed and the experience had a profound influence on his work. Although he died at the age of only 44, Dusart long outlived his teacher and chief source of inspiration, Adriaen van Ostade, and inherited his master's drawings,... Read full biography
The son of the organist of Saint Bavo in Haarlem, Cornelis Dusart became one of the last and most celebrated pupils of Adriaen van Ostade, taking over his master's studio after his death in 1685. Ostade left a number of unfinished paintings behind, some of which Dusart completed and the experience had a profound influence on his work. Although he died at the age of only 44, Dusart long outlived his teacher and chief source of inspiration, Adriaen van Ostade, and inherited his master's drawings, along with those of Ostade's short-lived brother, Isack, in 1685. During the following decade or so, Dusart made a considerable number of lively, finished watercolors of this type, undoubtedly intended for sale as independent works of art. Most of... Read full biography
The son of the organist of Saint Bavo in Haarlem, Cornelis Dusart became one of the last and most celebrated pupils of Adriaen van Ostade, taking over his master's studio after his death in 1685. Ostade left a number of unfinished paintings behind, some of which Dusart completed and the experience had a profound influence on his work. Although he died at the age of only 44, Dusart long outlived his teacher and chief source of inspiration, Adriaen van Ostade, and inherited his master's drawings, along with those of Ostade's short-lived brother, Isack, in 1685. During the following decade or so, Dusart made a considerable number of lively, finished watercolors of this type, undoubtedly intended for sale as independent works of art. Most of them represent the sort of peasant subjects so beloved of Ostade, but Dusart treated these subje... Read full biography

