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Dutch painter (byname
Gherardo della Notte), a leading member of the Utrecht school influenced
by the Italian painter Caravaggio.
Like his slightly
older contemporary Hendrik Terbrugghen, Honthorst first studied under
Abraham Bloemaert in Utrecht.
In about 1610 he moved to Italy, where he had leading nobles as patrons
and assimilated Caravaggio's realism and dramatic use of artificial light
into a personal idiom. Notable works of his Italian sojourn include The
Beheading of St John the Baptist (S. Maria delle Scala, Rome), Christ
Before the High Priest (c. 1617, National Gallery, London), and the Supper
Party (1620, Uffizi, Florence), all nocturnal scenes.
Returning to
the Netherlands in 1620, Honthorst stayed in Utrecht until 1627, the year
of Rubens' visit to his home. He was dean of the Utrecht Guild of St.
Luke in 1625-26, and in 1628 he worked at the court of Charles I in London.
The rest of his life was spent primarily in The Hague and, after 1652,
at Utrecht.
Although Honthorst
accepted commissions for decorative cycles and painted at least one illusionistic
ceiling, his most significant contribution to Dutch painting was his joint
leadership, with Terbrugghen, of the Utrecht followers of Caravaggio.
Rembrandt's use of Caravaggesque devices in his early works derives in
large part from his knowledge of Honthorst's paintings. Honthorst's brother
Willem van Honthorst (1594-1666), who was also an accomplished painter,
sometimes worked with him.
Works
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