Dirk van der Aa (1731 – 23 February 1809) was a Dutch rococo painter who is best known for his allegorical work.
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/07/Dirk_van_der_Aa-Putti.jpg/300px-Dirk_van_der_Aa-Putti.jpg)
Life
editHe was born in The Hague, and first apprenticed to Johann Heinrich Keller, and then to Gerrit Mes with whom he would later start a workshop; they specialized in grisaille decorative paintings. He counted Evert Morel, Cornelis Kuipers, Johan Christiaan Roedig[1] and Andries van der Aa amongst his students. He died in his home city of The Hague.
Works by van der Aa
edit- Allegory of Summer: Cherubs disporting in a landscape (1775), part of a pair with Allegory of Autumn view at Artnet
- Spielende Putten auf Wolken (Playing Putti on Clouds) (1773)
- An overdoor: Putti desporting on clouds by a vase on pedestal (1773) view at Artnet
- Spielende Putten, Allegorie des Sommers (Playing Putti, allegory of summer), attributed to Dirk van der Aa view at Artnet
References
edit- ^ Hoogsteder & Hoogsteder, A Feast for the Eye Archived January 7, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
External links
editMedia related to Dirk van der Aa at Wikimedia Commons