Background
Van Looy was the son of a carpenter, but his father lost his job when his eyesight began to fail. His mother died when he was five years old and when his father died soon afterwards, he ended up in the Haarlem municipal orphanage.
Van Looy was the son of a carpenter, but his father lost his job when his eyesight began to fail. His mother died when he was five years old and when his father died soon afterwards, he ended up in the Haarlem municipal orphanage.
He trained to become a house painter, but was able to follow drawing classes, from 1877 at the "Rijksacademie van Beeldende Kunsten" in Amsterdam. The years 1885-1886 he spent traveling through Italy, Spain, and Morocco. He was a pupil of August Allebé, January Jacob Goteling Vinnis, Dirk January Hendrik Joosten, and Hendrik Jacobus Scholten.
There he began to draw sketches, which are collected in two volumes.
In 1901, he spent another year in Spain and Morocco. He moved back to Haarlem in 1913, when the orphanage where he grew up was converted to the Frans Hals Museum.
He bought a house on the corner of the Haarlemmerhout park, where he was often seen taking walks and served as an inspiration for Godfried Bomans, among others After his death this house was converted to a museum in his name (now only visible with a plaque on the facade).
Foreign many years, he belonged to the editorial staff of the literary monthly De Nieuwe Gids (The New Guide).
He is one of the most typical authors of De Beweging van Tachtig (The Movement of the 1880s). He idolised words, especially in his travel books He was an Epicurean and wrote with imagination about the outward appearance of our everyday life.
The Teylers Museum has a collection of his drawings from his travels.
His pupils were Charlotte Bouten, Chris Huidekooper, Ella Pauw, Johan Vlaanderen, and January Vogelaar. In the years 1948-1976 the museum "" became a gallery for modern art exhibitions.
When it closed its doors, most of the collection and the accompanying archive was given to the Frans Hals Museum. Since 1985, a five-yearly Jacobus van Looy-prize is awarded by the "Stichting Jacobus van Looy" to artists who have excelled both as a writer and a painter.
So far, the prize has been awarded to Armando, Lucebert, Breyten Breytenbach, Charlotte Mutsaers, and Wim T. Schippers.
Arti et Amicitiae]
He was a member of the Amsterdam artist society Arti et Amicitiae.