Auguste Antoine Joseph Payen (12 November 1792 – 18 January 1853), also known as Antoine Payen the Younger, was a Belgian painter and naturalist. He was born in Brussels and died in Tournai. His father, Antoine Payen the Elder, was an architect.
Payen was commissioned by Dutch King William I to create a series of paintings of the landscape of the Dutch East Indies.[2] One of these works, The Great Postal Route near Rejapolah, painted in 1828, hangs in the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam.[1]
While in the Dutch East Indies in 1819, Payen met an eight-year-old Raden Saleh and, recognizing his talent for drawing, became Saleh's first mentor. Saleh would follow Payen to Europe three years after Payen's departure from Java in 1826.[2]
References
editCitations
edit- ^ a b "The Great Postal Route near Rejapolah, Auguste Antoine Joseph Payen, 1828". rijksmuseum.nl. Rijksmuseum. Retrieved 30 December 2018.
- ^ a b Sarahtika, Dhania. "Life of Raden Saleh, Artist of Two Worlds". Jakarta Globe. Retrieved 30 December 2018.
Bibliography
edit- Antoine Payen: Peintre des Indes orientales : vie et écrits d'un artiste du XIXe siècle (English translation: Antoine Payen: East Indian Painter: Life and Writings of a 19th Century Artist). By Marie-Odette Scalliet. The Netherlands: Leyde, Pays-Bas, Research School CNWS, December 1995. ISBN 978-9073782426.