Page:Cyclopedia of painters and paintings (IA cyclopediaofpain02cham).pdf/217

This page needs to be proofread.

after having visited, from 1849 to 1856, England and Scotland, North America, Brazil, and Australia. After three years in Munich he spent one year in Italy, attracted especially by the ruins at Pola, Istria; took part in the campaigns of 1866 and 1870, exhibited his works in Dresden for the benefit of the Albert Union in 1873, and settled in Berlin in 1874. Works: Moonlight on the Coast (1858), Schwerin Gallery; several in Collection of Emperor of Germany.—Schlie, 28.


Dismissal of Hagar, Guercino, Brera, Milan.

HAGAR, DISMISSAL OF, Guercino, Brera, Milan; canvas, H. 3 ft. 8 in. × 5 ft. Abraham sending away Hagar. This picture was much admired by Lord Byron. Hagar, her face red with weeping, holds her son by the hand and turns her eyes to the patriarch. Sarah, in purple, is seen further back. Half-figures. Acquired in 1811 from Galleria Sampieri, Bologna. Engraved by R. Strange.


HAGBORG, AUGUST, born at Gothenburg, Sweden; contemporary. Genre and landscape painter, pupil of Stockholm Academy and in Paris of Palmaroli. Medal, Paris, 3d class, 1879. Works: Spring Tide in La Manche (1879), Luxembourg Museum; In the Cemetery of Tourville (1883); An Alarm (1884); Preparation for Fishing, Fisherman's Daughter (1885); Fisherwoman, Charles Crocker, San Francisco; First Quarrel, J. A. Scudder, St. Louis.


HAGEMANS, MAURICE; contemporary. Landscape painter in Brussels. Works: March Sun near Chimay; Pond of Forge-Gérard; Meadow with Birch Trees.


HAGEN, BLANCA VON, born in Breslau, Nov. 4, 1842. Portrait and genre painter, studied in Berlin and Dresden, then pupil in Munich of Benczur, and in Berlin of Gussow; visited Italy and Paris, and settled in Berlin. Works: Wallachian Girl; After Mass; On an Art Tour; Hagar and Ishmael; At the Sick-bed.—Müller, 230.


HAGEN, JORIS VAN DER (Verhagen), died at The Hague, buried May 23, 1669. Dutch school; landscape painter, strongly influenced by Ruysdael. Settled at The Hague in 1642, and was one of the founders there, of the new painters' guild, Pictura, in 1656. His pictures are truthful in details, but the colouring is dark and heavy. Works: Two Landscapes, Louvre; View near Arnheim (1649), View in Gueldres, Hague Museum; View over Canals, Museum, Amsterdam; Hilly Landscape with Felled Tree, Town Hall, ib.; Dutch Landscape with Cattle, Berlin Museum; Evening Landscape, River Shore, Carlsruhe Gallery; Landscape with Stag-hunt (figures by Lingelbach), Kunsthalle, Hamburg; Landscapes (2) with Figures (by J. le Duc), two others, Copenhagen Gallery.—Allgem. d. Biogr., x. 339; Burger, i. 151, 267; De Stuers, 40.



HAGEN, THEODOR, born at Düsseldorf, May 24, 1842. Landscape painter, pupil of Düsseldorf Academy under Andreas and Karl Müller, then of Oswald Achenbach; travelled in Switzerland and the Tyrol, became, in 1871, professor at, and in 1877 director of, the Weimar Art School; resigned his professorship in 1881. Works: