Lizzy Ansingh

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Lizzy Ansingh
Thérèse Schwartze - Portret van Lizzie Ansingh.jpg
1902 portrait by Thérèse Schwartze
Born Maria Elisabeth Georgina Ansingh
(1875-03-13)13 March 1875
Utrecht, Netherlands
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Amsterdam, Netherlands
Alma mater Royal Academy of Visual Arts
Known for Painting
Movement Amsterdamse Joffers

Maria Elisabeth Georgina 'Lizzy' Ansingh (13 March 1875 – 14 December 1959) was a Dutch painter.[1] She belonged to a group of female post-impressionist painters influenced by the Amsterdam Impressionism movement called the Amsterdamse Joffers. She was also a member of the (still existing) Amsterdam art circles Arti et Amicitiae[2] and Sint Lucas.[3] She died in Amsterdam on 14 December 1959.

Biography

Lizzy Ansingh was born in Utrecht. She was the daughter of Edzard Willem Ansingh, a pharmacist, and the painter Clara Theresia Schwartze. She was the granddaughter of Johann Georg Schwartze, also a painter, and a niece of the painter Thérèse Schwartze. It was her aunt Thérèse Schwartze who gave Lizzy her first lessons in drawing. Lizzy lived with her aunt for 16 years. She encouraged her niece to develop her artistic career and introduced her to numerous other painters, among others French impressionists and the famous Dutch painters George Hendrik Breitner, Piet Mondriaan and Simon Maris.[4]

During the years 1894–1897 Lizzy studied at the Amsterdam Royal Academy of Visual Arts.[5] Here she studied with the professors August Allebé, Nicolaas van der Waay and Carel Dake.

At the Academy a lasting friendship was born between a group of female painters, later called the Amsterdamse Joffers: Lizzy Ansingh, Marie van Regteren Altena, Suze Bisschop-Robertson,[6] Coba Ritsema,[7] Ans van den Berg, Jacoba Surie, Nelly Bodenheim, Betsy Westendorp-Osieck and Jo Bauer-Stumpff. The importance of the Amsterdamse Joffers lies primarily in functioning as role models for younger female painters in the Netherlands, especially during and after the 1970s.[8]

Other works

Besides portrait painting, Ansingh gained celebrity for painting dolls,[9][10] in which she was also encouraged by her aunt Thérèse Schwartze. She purchased a circa 1740-1750 dollhouse (or poppenhuis) in which she arranged her dolls for inspiration, as well as furnishing it with numerous other articles she collected. Her Amsterdam studio in the Herengracht, along with the dollhouse, was severely damaged on the night of 27 April 1943 when a British bomber was shot down, destroying the Carlton Hotel and much of the nl (Reguliersdwarsstraat) alongside her studio (the ensuing fire was the most devastating in Amsterdam since 1659 and is recorded in Anne Frank's diary). The dollhouse has since been restored and can be seen at the nl (Museum Arnhem).[11]

She also wrote two books for children,[12] `n Vruchtenmandje (A little fruit basket), published in 1927, and Tante Tor is jarig (Aunt Tor has her birthday).[13] This booklet, published in 1950, was illustrated by Nelly Bodenheim.

Public Collections

References

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  14. Collection Rijksmuseum

Further reading

  • Venema, Adriaan, De Amsterdamse Joffers. Het Wereldvenster: 1977.

External links