Biographical/Historical Note
Romeyn de Hooghe was born in Amsterdam in 1645 and worked there until c.1680-1682, when he moved to Haarlem, where he died
in 1708. For several Netherlandish provinces, he created interior architectural paintings and other works. In 1662 De Hooghe
was invited by Adam Frans van der Meulen (1632-1690) to Paris, where he etched the baptism of the Dauphin in 1668. There he
met King Jan III Sobieski of Poland and was knighted by him in 1675.
De Hooghe painted, engraved, sculpted, designed medals, enameled, taught drawing school, and bought and sold art as a dealer.
During the 1690s he made sculptures for the palace of Het Loo (1689-1692), designed and etched triumphal arches and medals
for William III's entry into the Hague (1691), and designed the Haarlem market festival decorations for the peace celebration
after the capture of Naumur (1695). His political, legal, and economic interests are evident in his writings:
Schouburgh der Nederlandsche Veranderingen (1674),
Æsopus in Europa (1701),
Spiegel van Staat des Vereenigde Nederlanden (1706), and
Hieroglyphica of Merkbeelden der oude Volkeren (1735), all of which he also illustrated. He was well-educated and may have attended law classes at a university in Harderwijk
or Leiden.
De Hooghe's earliest print, after Nicolas Berchem, was made around 1662. He created about 3500 images, most after his own
designs, some after other artists, for himself and other authors, publishers, and printers. His plates were often retouched
and adapted for later events, sometimes by De Hooghe, sometimes by others. He etched allegories and mythological scenes, portraits,
caricatures, political satires, historical subjects, landscapes, topographical views (especially of Netherlandish cities),
battle scenes, genre scenes, title pages, and book illustrations. From 1667-1691 he illustrated various newspapers:
Hollandsche Mercurius,
Princelycke almanach,
Orangien Wonderspiegel. The first political iconographer of the Netherlands and its first great caricaturist, De Hooghe was closely associated with
William of Orange. He repeatedly caricatured James II and Louis XIV, sometimes using pseudonyms on his most audacious images.
He was an expressive master of physiognomy; and his original, lively style displayed the baroque fashion for spectacular and
allegorical fantasy. Romeyn de Hooghe was the most significant and prolific Netherlandish engraver in the second half of the
seventeenth century.
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