(Cornelis Theodorus Maria) Kees van
Dongen (b Delfshaven, nr Rotterdam, 26 January 1877; d
Monte Carlo, 28 May 1968), was a French painter and printmaker of Dutch
birth. He took evening classes in geometric drawing from 1892 to 1897 at the
Akademie voor Beeldende Kunsten in Rotterdam.
In 1895 he began working intermittently for the newspaper
Rotterdamsche Nieuwsblad,
for which he made, among other things, a series of bright watercolor
drawings of Rotterdam's red-light district and illustrations of Queen
Wilhelmina's coronation. Van Dongen's first paintings used dark tones
in imitation of Rembrandt, who remained the most important model for
his work; his later book on
Rembrandt
was, in fact, a projection of his
own life. By the mid-1890s he was using more vivid contrasts of black
and white, for example in
Spotted Chimera (1895; private collection),
his palette soon becoming brighter and his line more animated. In
Le Muet Windmill
(1896; private collection), a red ochre monochrome painting, he successfully
enlivened the color by means of broad, energetic
brushstrokes.