Born: 1568, Brussels, Belgium
Died: 1625, Antwerp, Belgium
Jan Brueghel was born in a family of Flemish
painters in Brussels. He was the second son of Pieter
Brueghel The Elder (1525-1569),
who was a major landscape artist. Jan had been given several
nicknames, called "Velvet", "Flower" and "Paradise" Brueghel
- the nicknames were to some extent an effort to distinguish
between members of the same family.
His father was often called
the "Peasant" Brueghel and Jan's elder brother, Pieter
was called "Hell Brueghel" because he exploited the
growing market for pictures of hell-fire and demons. Brueghel
attended school in Antwerp where he was a pupil of Pieter Goctkind
and probably also of Gillis van Coninxloo during the years
of 1578-1584.
He also studied watercolour painting with
his grandmother, Mayken Verhulst, in Italy in 1589. There
he entered
the service of Cardinal Borromeo in Rome and Milan in 1595
and 1596.
He returned to Antwerp in 1598 and settled
and became a member of a painters' guild. He married
Isabella de Jode
in 1599. They had one daughter and a son, Jan II (1601-1678)
who also became a painter.
After Isabella died in 1603,
he married Catharine van Marienberghe in 1605. With
her they had
eight children, including the painter Ambrosius (1617-1675).
Jan Brueghel 's position in society and among his fellow
artists was assured during his lifetime: he solidified
the family reputation
established by his famous father, and his works were
very influential.
His flower paintings are perhaps his
most
well known, though
he began painting flowers only toward the end of his
career. By the time Brueghel began painting, "Turkish" flowers
such as tulips and hyacinths had appeared in Europe, as well
as American plants such as marigolds, nasturtiums, and sunflowers.
Brueghel's reputation as a master at painting flowers is notable
because of the newness of the genre, and he was proud of his
mastery of minute detail. Most of his still lifes date from
1610-21.
His bouquets all have a sure touch in
terms of composition. His juxtaposition of flowers of
all seasons in the same picture
is less a botanical curiosity than a suggestion of
the "Paradise" or "Eden" quality
added to the very idea of such beauty and fullness of nature.
His landscapes, which he painted all his
life, and which show the influences he encountered on
his trip to Italy, also take
on certain characteristics of his father's work,
which he obviously studied. He collaborated with many
of his contemporaries -
most famously with Rubens, who wrote his epitaph.
Two of his most famous works, collaborated with Rubens,
are "Madonna
in a Wreath of Flowers" (Brueghel painted the wreath),
and "Paradise", also called "Adam and Eve in
the Garden".
His style was perpetuated by his sons
Jan Brueghel II (1601-78) and Ambrosius Brueghel (1617-75),
whose
sons then carried on the tradition into the 18th
century. Jan Brueghel died in Antwerp of cholera in 1625.