Jan Pynas

Dutch Golden Age painter
Raising Lazarus, c.1615, collection Philadelphia Museum of Art

Jan Symonsz. Pynas (1582, Alkmaar – 1631, Amsterdam), was a Dutch Golden Age painter.

Biography

According to Houbraken Jan and Jacob Pynas were good at landscapes and figures, but Jan was better than Jacob.[1] Jan travelled to Italy in 1605 with Pieter Lastman where they spent several years practising art after the great Italian masters.[1]

According to the RKD he was the brother of Jacob and he made two trips to Italy in 1605 and 1617 and it is not certain his brother accompanied him.[2] In Rome he was friends with Adam Elsheimer, Pieter Lastman, and Jacob Ernst Thomann von Hagelstein.[1] Jan's sister Meynsge married the artist Jan Tengnagel in 1611.[2] He became the teacher of Bartholomeus Breenberg and Steven van Goor.[2]

The works of the Pynas brothers are close in style to the painter Adam Elsheimer, and there has been a history of mis-attribution between the three, where both of the Pynas brothers are known to have signed their works "J. Pynas."[3]

Jan died in Amsterdam; Jacob survived him by many years and is thought to have died in Delft.

Selected works

  • 1605 – Raising of Lazarus, (Aschaffenburg)
  • 1610 – Moses Turning Water into Blood, (Rembrandthuis, Amsterdam)
  • 1613 – Dismissal of Hagar, (Suermondt-Ludwig Museum, Aachen)
  • 1618 – Jacob Being Shown Joseph’s Bloodstained Robe (Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg)
  • 1618 – Joseph Selling Corn in Egypt, (London)
Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
International
  • VIAF
National
  • France
  • BnF data
  • Germany
Artists
  • KulturNav
  • RKD Artists
  • ULAN
People
  • Netherlands
  • Deutsche Biographie
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jan Pynas.

References

  1. ^ a b c (in Dutch) Jan en Jacob Pinas Biography in De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen (1718) by Arnold Houbraken, courtesy of the Digital library for Dutch literature
  2. ^ a b c Jan Symonsz. Pynas in the RKD
  3. ^ Kren and Marx, Comments on Landscape with Mercury and Battus at the Web Gallery of Art