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Louis Bernard Coclers

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Studies by L.B. Coclers with selfportrait (right) and portraits of his son (upper left) and father, J.-B. Coclers (bottom left)

Louis Bernard Coclers (1740 in Maastricht or Liège – 20 April 1817 in Liège) was a Southern Netherlandish portrait painter and engraver who worked mainly in Liège, Maastricht, Leiden and Amsterdam.

Life

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Louis Bernard Coclers was born in Liège or Maastricht in 1740. He was instructed by his father, Jean-Baptiste Coclers. He spent three years in Italy, and after his return he settled in Maastricht, later in Nijmegen, Dordrecht and Leiden (from 1769 onwards).

Compromised politically, he left Holland in 1787, and went to Paris, where he remained several years. He again returned to Holland and resided in Amsterdam, where he painted portraits and engraved cabinet pictures in the manner of Frans van Mieris the Elder, Gabriël Metsu, and Godfried Schalcken, which he exhibited regularly from 1808 to 1813. He engraved 166 plates; they are signed with a cipher, or his initials. One of his paintings and many of his engravings are in the Rijksmuseum Amsterdam.

At the end of his life, Coclers returned to Liège where he died in 1817.

Works

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Paintings

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Engravings

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  • Malle Babbe, after Frans Hals (Rijksmuseum)
  • Mother teaching her son (Rijksmuseum)
  • Reading man (Rijksmuseum)
  • Old woman preparing beans, 1780 (Rijksmuseum)
  • Double-portrait Napoleon and Pope Pius VII, ca. 1805 (Rijksmuseum)

References

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  • Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainBryan, Michael (1886). "Coclers, Louis Bernard". In Graves, Robert Edmund (ed.). Bryan's Dictionary of Painters and Engravers (A–K). Vol. I (3rd ed.). London: George Bell & Sons.