Page:Cyclopedia of painters and paintings (IA cyclopediaofpain04cham).pdf/338
and Vegetables, Madrid Museum; Kitchen Interior, Brussels Museum; Still-Life, Museum, Antwerp; Arrival of Cardinal Infant Ferdinand, City Hall, ib.; Fish-Seller's Shop, Ghent Museum; Cock Fight, Lille Museum; Table with Fruit and Provisions, Amsterdam Museum; Poultry-Yard (1643), Berlin Museum; Lady among Kitchen Supplies and Utensils (figure by Thulden), Carlsruhe Gallery; Still-Life, Cologne Museum; Fruit and other Eatables (1647), Dresden Gallery; Poultry (1652), Leipsic Museum; Kitchen Interior (1629), Cassel Gallery; do., Weimar Museum; Fruit-Piece (1647), Copenhagen Gallery; do., Hermitage, St. Petersburg; Dead Game, Leuchtenberg Gallery, ib.; Breakfast-Table (2), Schwerin Gallery; Fruit Festoon (1644), Vienna Museum.—Ch. Blanc, École flamande; Burger, Musées, ii. 157; Kramm, vi. 1661; Kugler (Crowe), ii. 338; Michiels, ix. 187; Rooses (Reber), 422; Van den Branden, 1082.
UTRECHT, CHRISTOPH VAN, born at Utrecht in 1491 (or 1498?), died at Lisbon in 1550 (or 1557). Dutch school; history and portrait painter, supposed pupil of Antonis Moro (?), with whom he is said to have gone to Spain, and thence to Lisbon, where he painted altarpieces for churches, and highly-esteemed portraits, and was much honoured by John III. of Portugal.—Kramm, i. 232; Nagler, xix. 268; Raczynski, Arts en Portugal, 255.
UTRECHT, JACOB VAN, flourished at
Utrecht about 1523. Dutch school; portrait
painter, possibly the same who was received
master of the guild at Antwerp in
1506. Signed himself Jacobus Trajectensis.
Works: Male Portrait (1523), Berlin Museum;
do. (1524), Baron Minutoli's Collection,
Schloss Fridersdorf, Silesia.—Meyer,
Gemälde der köngl. Mus. (1883), 471; Zeitschr.
f. b. K., xxi. 324.
UWINS, THOMAS, born at Pentonville,
near London, Feb. 25, 1782, died at Staines,
Aug. 25, 1857. Apprenticed to an engraver,
but became a student at Royal Academy in
1798; began as a water-colour painter and
illustrator of books. In 1814 he visited the
South of France and took up subject painting
in oils; studied in Italy in 1826-31, and
on his return established a reputation by
his Italian scenes; became A.R.A. in 1833,
R.A. in 1838, librarian in 1844, surveyor of
the Queen's pictures in 1845, and keeper of
the National Gallery in 1847. Works: Vintage
in South of France, Chapeau de Brigand,
Sir Guyon fighting for Temperance (Faerie
Queene, ii. 12), National Gallery.—Art Journal,
Sept., 1847; Oct., 1857; Cat. Royal
Acad.; Redgrave; Ch. Blanc, École anglaise;
Sandby, ii. 157; Mrs. Nevins, Recollections
of T. U. (London, 1858).
UYTENBROECK (Wtenbrouck), MOZES
VAN, surnamed Little Moses, born at
Delft about 1590, died in The Hague about
1650. Dutch school; landscape painter, in
the style of Elsheimer and Bril, supposed
pupil of Poelenburg; master of the guild at
The Hague in 1620; its dean in 1627; enlivened
his pictures with scriptural and
mythological scenes, which show a vivid imagination,
great skill in grouping, and knowledge
of chiaroscuro. Works: Juno and
Argus (1625), Augsburg Gallery; Raising
of Lazarus, Aschaffenburg Gallery; Feast
of Bacchus (1627), Jupiter and Mercury received
by Philemon and Baucis, Brunswick
Gallery; Triumph of Bacchus, Landscape
with Mars and Venus (attributed to Elsheimer),
Cassel Gallery; Moonlight, Copenhagen
Gallery; Bacchus and Ariadne, Prague
Gallery; Landscape with dancing Shepherds,
do. with Nymphs, Museum, Vienna;
do. with Herd, Liechtenstein Gallery, ib.;
do. (attributed to Elsheimer), Pesth Museum;
Lot and Daughters (1627), Count Belgiojoso,
Milan; Landscape with Cascade,
Uffizi, Florence.—Bode, Studien, 337; Immerzeel,
iii. 151; Kramm, vi. 1663; Riegel,
Beiträge, ii. 213; Vosmaer, Rembrandt, ses
précurseurs, 98.