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De Noter, Pierre-François
(b Waelhem, 23 Feb 1779; d Ghent, 22 Nov 1843). Belgian painter, designer and printmaker. The son of the painter and architect, Pierre-François De Noter the elder (17471830), and brother of Jean-Baptiste De Noter (17861855), a painter of architectural views, he had an early grounding in the arts. He was taught by Guillaume-Jacques Herreyns at the Mechelen Academie and attended Jan Frans Van Geels sculpture class until 1793, when the French invasion prevented further study. One of his earliest commissions, shared with his father and Herreyns, was the decoration (begun shortly after 1793) of the SS Pieter en Pauwelkerk in Mechelen. This project had a determining influence on his career. The French had transformed the church into a Temple of Reason, and it seems likely that the damage done by them to the suppressed religious institutions of the Low Countries awakened the interest of Pierre-François De Noter and his brother in the architectural heritage of the Flemish towns. Pierre-François worked as a designer for a printed fabric manufacturer and as a printer before devoting himself to painting. He settled in Ghent in 1810 and subsequently was a frequent exhibitor at the Salons of Belgium and northern France, where he won numerous prizes.
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