Background
According to van Mander his father was from Haarlem and he learned to paint in Amsterdam for a year and a half by Cornelis Ketel, and later by Hans von Achen.
According to van Mander his father was from Haarlem and he learned to paint in Amsterdam for a year and a half by Cornelis Ketel, and later by Hans von Achen.
Van Mander claimed he still lived in Amsterdam and went on to describe several portraits by him which he particularly admired, including a half-length portrait of Sara Schurmans playing a citar. His most popular piece was an oil-on-copper painting with a procession of angry women in Rome on hearing that the Senate had decided in favor of polygamy for mentor According to the RKD he travelled back and forth to Denmark several times, which is possibly where he later died.
He was the subject of an exhibition at Frederiksborg Palace in 2007 as the man behind the collection"s most famous portraits.
According to Codart he was court painter of the Danish king Christian IV who became a spy in Swedish service and died of the plague in Elsinore. Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam
Kunstmuseum Basel, Basel
Lower Saxony State Museum, Hanover
Frederiksborg Palace, Hillerød
Statens Museum for Kunst, Copenhagen
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Texas.