Gerard Melder
Gerard Melder (1693 – 1754), was an 18th-century miniature and watercolor painter from the Northern Netherlands.
Biography
He was born in Amsterdam. According to Johan van Gool who devoted six pages to his biography in his Nieuwe Schouburg, Melder's father Cornelis Melder died when he was six, and he was named after his grandfather, the Utrecht fortifications master Gerard Melder, who published an instructional booklet in 1658 on the Utrecht fortifications.[1] This younger Gerard Melder made copies on ivory after Rosalba Carriera whose miniatures he collected.[1] He became acquainted with the works of Rosalba after Theodoor Wilkens returned from Italy with a few of them.[1] Melder became, through practise, quite good at making Rosalba-like miniature copies of Dutch masters for snuffboxes, and later tried his hand at larger works.[1] Van Gool mentioned copies by his hand of works by Gerard Dou, Adriaen van der Werff, and Hans Rottenhammer.[1] In 1728 he married Margareta Schalkwijk a Velden, and in 1735 they moved to Utrecht.[1]
Van Gool used a portrait of Margaretha Wulfraet that was in Melder's possession for his engraved portrait of her.[1]
According to the RKD he was also a follower of Herman Saftleven, and is known for etchings and watercolors as well as his copied miniatures on ivory after old masters.[2]
He died in Utrecht.[2]
References
- Articles with Dutch-language sources (nl)
- Articles with short description
- Short description is different from Wikidata
- Articles with VIAF identifiers
- Articles with GND identifiers
- Articles with RKDartists identifiers
- Articles with ULAN identifiers
- Articles with BPN identifiers
- Commons category link is on Wikidata
- 1693 births
- 1754 deaths
- 18th-century Dutch painters
- 18th-century Dutch male artists
- Dutch male painters
- Painters from Amsterdam