Anna De Weert, née Cogen; Anna Virginie Caroline De Weert (27 May 1867, Ghent – 12 May 1950, Ghent) was a Belgian painter. She would paint in the Luminist style.

Anna De Weert
Born
Anna Cogen

27 May 1867
Ghent, Belgium
Died12 May 1950 (1950-05-13) (aged 82)
Ghent, Belgium
NationalityBelgian
Occupationpainter
Known forLuminist painting
Political partyLiberal
SpouseMaurice De Weert [nl]

Life

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Weert was born in Ghent as Anna Virginie Caroline Cogen. Her family were prosperous with a high regard for nature, art and in particular watercolours. Her grandfather was the writer Karel Lodewijk Ledeganck and her uncles, Alphons and Felix Cogen, were successful painters. Her father died when she was two so she grew up in the care of her extended family and in particular her mother and grandmother.[1]

 
Tonnelle de rosiers
 
The Poppies

Each summer she was taken to the family's home at Menton in the South of France. This summer holiday became an annual tradition all her life. She first formally studied art at the Academy of Ghent. In 1891 she married Maurice De Weert [nl], who was a politician.[1]

In the 1890s, she was a private (pro bono) student of the Belgian painter Emile Claus. She and her husband spent summers with him in the 1890s.[2] In 1895, she acquired a new studio as she had bought a farm at Afsnee near Ghent, beside the river Lys, which had belonged to a Dominican Monastery.[3]

 
"My Studio" in 1909/10

Claus painted her in a river scene in 1899.[4] She recorded what her own studio in Afsnee looked like in about 1909.[3]

Anna Cogen was a productive artist[5] and had a long association with the Cercle Artistique et Littéraire in her home town after she first exhibited there in 1895.[1]

Death and legacy

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She died in Ghent in 1950. In her will she left the painting of her to the museum in Ghent together with a work by George Minne and two old masters.[4]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Anna De Weert, Francis Maere Fine Arts, Retrieved 1 May 2017
  2. ^ Portrait of Anna De Weert Archived 2017-05-01 at the Wayback Machine, Emile Claus, LukasWeb, Retrieved 1 May 2017
  3. ^ a b "My Studio in June, 1909-1910 | MSK Gent". www.mskgent.be. Retrieved 2020-12-30.
  4. ^ a b "Portrait of the Artist Anna De Weert | MSK Gent". www.mskgent.be. Retrieved 2020-12-30.
  5. ^ De Weert at RKD