Edith Greindl (1905 – 2004) was a leading Belgian art historian specializing in Flemish paintings of the 17th century.
Edith Greindl | |
---|---|
Born | June 25, 1905 |
Died | June 7, 2004 |
Her overview of the “golden age of Flemish painting” was translated into Dutch from the original French. She was a pupil of Leo van Puyvelde along with Marie-Louise Hairs and her 1938 doctoral thesis on Flemish still life painting for the University of Liège was published later in 1956.[1] She is credited with the first academic study of Flemish still-life painters such as Jacob van de Kerckhoven and Andries Daniels. She was awarded Chevalier de l'Ordre de Léopold for service in the arts.[2]
Works
edit- Corneille de Vos : portraitiste flamand (1584-1651), 1944
- Les peintres flamands de nature morte au XVIIe siècle, 1956
- Jan Vermeer, 1632-1675, 1961
- XVIIe siècle : l'âge d'or de la peinture flamande, 1989
- De Rubens à Van Dyck : l'âge d'or de la peinture flamande, 1994
References
edit- ^ bio of Hairs in Actorem Rubenianum
- ^ Genealogy bio for Belgian Greindl family website
- Works in Worldcat