dutch-and-flemish-painters: Martin van Dorne - Trompe l'oeil of swags of fruit and flowers pinned to
dutch-and-flemish-painters: Martin van Dorne - Trompe l'oeil of swags of fruit and flowers pinned to a white wall with moths and other insects - 1770oil on canvas, Height: 68 cm (26.7 in); Width: 85.6 cm (33.7 in)Martin van Dorne or Martinus Vandorne (Leuven, baptized on 22 January 1736 - Leuven, 2 May 1808) was a Flemish painter and poet of the 18th-century, specialized in still lifes. He is known for his still lifes of fruit and flower. He was nominated court painter by Prince Charles Alexander of Lorraine, the governor of the Austrian Netherlands. He was also a poet in the Dutch language.Martin van Dorne was the son of Amandus van Dorne and Elisabetha Annosset. Nothing is known about his training and early career. It is possible that he was self-taught. He was established in his hometown as a painter of floral still lifes and gained a regional reputation. Possibly, like many contemporaries, he was also working as a decorative painter.He married Petronilla Ekermans on 25 February 1765. Of their children a son called Frans (10 April 1776-30 November 1848) became an esteemed portrait painter.Prince Charles of Lorraine, governor of the Austrian Netherlands appointed van Dorne as an ordinary painter, by letters patent dated 5 August 1779. In October 1800 van Dorne was, together with Pieter-Jozef Verhaghen, François Xavier Joseph Jacquin, Josse-Pieter Geedts, Frans Berges, Pieter Goyers and Antoon Clevenbergh, a co-founder of the Academy of Leuven.Van Dorne was an amateur poet who composed occasional poetry at family feasts and meetings of artists. On the return to Belgium of the history painter Pieter-Jozef Verhaghen, who was also his friend, he described in a short didactic poem, all the works executed by the prolific artist Verhaghen.He died in the Civil Hospital of Leuven on 2 May 1808. -- source link