Eugène Joors
Eugène Joors (20 February 1850, Borgerhout - 23 October 1910, Berchem), was a Belgian painter in the realistic style.
Eugène Joors | |
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Born | Eugène Joors February 20, 1850 Borgerhout, Belgium |
Died | October 23, 1910 60) Berchem, Belgium | (aged
Education | Royal Academy of Fine Arts of Antwerp |
Occupation | Painter |
Life and work
He studied from 1865 to 1870 at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts of Antwerp, where his teacher were Polydore Beaufaux, Nicaise de Keyser and Jozef Van Lerius. In 1886, he became a teacher of still-life painting, in cooperation with his friend Frans Mortelmans. Among his pupils was the German painter Helene Cramer.[1] He executed both the traditional, carefully arranged still lifes and the more natural-appearing floral variety as well as a great variety of landscapes, portraits and genre scenes.
From 1879, he was a regular exhibitor in Antwerp and abroad, receiving a gold medal at a show in Munich where one of his paintings was bought by Prince Luitpold. He also assisted Charles Verlat in producing his famous panorama of the Battle of Waterloo.
He was awarded the Order of Leopold and a street in Borgerhout is named after him.
Selected paintings
- A Girl with Cherries (1879)
- Pigeons (1885)
- The Reward (1886)
- Lady with Parrot (c.1890)
References
Further reading
- Max Rooses (introduction), Eugène Joors: Catalogue des tableaux laissés par feu le peintre Eugène Joors. Ronnefeldt & de Volder, Antwerpen, 1911.