no title by Dolf Breetvelt
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no title 1948 - 1952

Dolf Breetvelt

Original oil on canvas
75 ⨯ 90 ⨯ 4 cm
ConditionExcellent
Price on request

CREATIE ART

  • About the artwork
    lit.:
    -Vrij Beelden en Creatie (van Dooren, 1996): page 41.

    provenance:
    -private collection
    -estate of the artist
  • About the artist

    Adolf Breetvelt, also known as Dolf Breetvelt (Delft, 31 December 1892 – Amstelveen, 20 May 1975), was a Dutch visual artist whose career spans figurative drawing, teaching practice and a late but significant move toward abstraction. He occupies a distinct position within the development of twentieth-century Dutch modern art.

    Breetvelt studied at the Koninklijke Academie van Beeldende Kunsten in The Hague, where he received a solid academic training in drawing and visual composition. In 1920 he moved to the Dutch East Indies, where he worked as a drawing teacher. This long period abroad had a lasting influence on his artistic outlook, sharpening his observational skills and deepening his interest in form and structure.

    He returned to the Netherlands in 1938 and gradually re-established himself within the Dutch art scene. A decisive moment in his career came in 1949, when he became a member of Vereniging Vrij Beelden, later renamed Liga Nieuw Beelden. This progressive movement included artists such as Piet Ouborg, Walter Spies and Hans Ittmann and played an important role in the postwar development of abstract and non-figurative art in the Netherlands.

    In the same year, Breetvelt created his first abstract paintings, marking a clear stylistic shift from figurative work to abstraction. His abstract oeuvre is characterized by a search for balance, rhythm and spatial tension, aligning him with broader modernist tendencies while retaining a personal, restrained visual language.

    Breetvelt participated in numerous group exhibitions at Museum Fodor in Amsterdam, where he became a recognizable figure within the city’s art world. His growing reputation culminated in a solo exhibition at Museum Fodor in 1963, confirming his position as a respected contributor to Dutch modern and abstract art.

    Today, Adolf (Dolf) Breetvelt is regarded as a meaningful representative of mid-twentieth-century Dutch abstraction, bridging academic tradition, international experience and postwar modernist experimentation.

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