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Hanneman, Adriaen
(b The Hague, c. 1604; d The Hague, bur 11 July 1671). Dutch painter. He came from a family of Catholic government officials. In 1619 he became a pupil of the portrait painter Anthonie van Ravesteyn (15801669), brother of Jan van Ravesteyn. Hannemans only known early work is a Portrait of a Woman (1625; ex-St Lucas Gal., Vienna; see ter Kuile, no. 1), which is entirely in the style of the van Ravesteyn brothers. Around 1626 he settled in London, where he married Elizabeth Wilson in 1630. It is possible that Hanneman worked for some time as an assistant in the workshop of Anthony van Dyck, who settled in England in 1632. The few signed pieces that have been preserved from Hannemans years in London, and his later paintings, show the strong influence of van Dycks style of portraiture.
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