Maria Machteld van Sypesteyn
Maria Machteld van Sypesteyn | |
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Selfportrait | |
Born |
Haarlem | March 28, 1724
Died |
April 26, 1774 50) Heemstede | (aged
Resting place | St. Bavochurch, Haarlem |
Nationality | Dutch |
Known for | miniature portraits |
Maria Machteld van Sypesteyn (1724 – 1774) was a painter from the Netherlands.
Sypesteyn was born in Haarlem as the daughter of the mayor Cornelis Ascanius van Sypesteyn (1694-1744), baljuw van Brederode, and Maria de Lange (1696-1744).[1] She became a pupil of the Haarlem miniature painter Henriëtte Wolters-van Pee, who she probably met through her father, who was a regent of the Proveniershuis where Henrëtte lived. She is known for miniatures on ivory in the manner of her teacher. She married the wealthy mr. Pieter van Schuylenburch, heer van Moermont en Renesse (1714-1764) on 9 July 1743 in The Hague and the couple lived in Haarlem, where her husband became mayor in the 1760s. He died relatively young in 1764 and was buried in the family grave in the St. Bavochurch. In 1767 she remarried another member of the Haarlem regency, mr. David van Lennep, who contracted Jurriaan Andriessen to paint new wall decorations in his Huis te Manpad for her.
Sypesteyn died in Heemstede and was buried in the St. Bavochurch. Most of her works are still in the family collection.
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Portrait of Prince Willem IV
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The new dining room walls painted for her by Andriessen
References
- ↑ Sypesteyn, Maria Machteld van (1724-1774) in 1001 Vrouwen uit de Nederlandse geschiedenis
- Maria Machteld van Sypesteyn on blog by Hans Krol
- Maria Machteld van Sypesteyn in 1001 Vrouwen uit de Nederlandse geschiedenis