• The Dutch Prix de Rome is based on the originally French Prix de Rome and is awarded annually to architects and artists younger than 35. The award was...
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  • Thumbnail for Prix de Rome
    The Prix de Rome (pronounced [pʁi də ʁɔm]) or Grand Prix de Rome was a French scholarship for arts students, initially for painters and sculptors, that...
    68 KB (4,903 words) - 02:52, 25 December 2024
  • "Prix de Rome" may refer to: Prix de Rome of the French government Prix de Rome (Belgium) Prix de Rome (Canada) Prix de Rome (Netherlands) Rome Prize of...
    399 bytes (74 words) - 18:47, 6 February 2015
  • Thumbnail for Ed Gebski
    Ed Gebski (category Prix de Rome (Netherlands) winners)
    Dominic van den, ’De mentale ruimte van de Prix de Rome’, HP/De Tijd, 23-10-1994. Sütö, Wilma, Wel het gezicht, niet de ziel, De Volkskrant, 8 November...
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  • Thumbnail for Piet Blom
    Piet Blom (category Prix de Rome (Netherlands) winners)
    representatives of the Structuralism movement. Blom was selected as the Dutch Prix de Rome recipient in 1962. At the Kasbah in Hengelo, there is a museum dedicated...
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  • Thumbnail for Louis Royer
    Louis Royer (category Prix de Rome (Netherlands) winners)
    While in Rome, Royers experienced financial difficulties because of the problems of the commission which awarded him the Dutch Prix de Rome and the bankruptcy...
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  • Thumbnail for Jacobus van Looy
    Jacobus van Looy (category Prix de Rome (Netherlands) winners)
    "Rijksacademie van Beeldende Kunsten" in Amsterdam. In 1884, he received the Prix de Rome, which allowed him to travel. The years 1885-86 he spent traveling through...
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  • Viviane Sassen (category Prix de Rome (Netherlands) winners)
    Stella McCartney, and Louis Vuitton, among others. She has won the Dutch Prix de Rome (2007) and the Infinity Award from International Center of Photography...
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  • Jan van den Dobbelsteen (category Prix de Rome (Netherlands) winners)
    Jan van den Dobbelsteen (born 28 September 1954, Waalre) is an interdisciplinary Dutch artist who teaches at Academy St. Joost in Breda and lives and works...
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  • understanding and caretaking..". In 2019 Pilgrim was awarded the Prix de Rome (Netherlands), for his work The Undercurrent. Pilgrim developed The Undercurrent...
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  • Guardian, 24 April 2012 "Prix de Rome Prix in the Netherlands". Archived from the original on 2012-09-07. Retrieved 2012-05-03. Folkert de Jong, 'Shoot the Freak'...
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  • Thumbnail for Jan Sluyters
    Jan Sluyters (category Prix de Rome (Netherlands) winners)
    The Netherlands Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven, The Netherlands Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam, the Netherlands Museum de Fundatie, Zwolle, The Netherlands Jan...
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    West 8 (category Prix de Rome (Netherlands) winners)
    Architecture". Cité de l'architecture & du patrimoine. Retrieved 2020-06-05. Lootsma, Bart (2000). Superdutch: New Architecture in the Netherlands. Princeton Architectural...
    13 KB (1,245 words) - 19:05, 5 November 2024
  • Thumbnail for Paul Joseph Gabriël
    Paul Joseph Gabriël (category Prix de Rome (Netherlands) winners)
    Paul Joseph Gabriël (11 July 1784 – 31 December 1833) was a Dutch painter and sculptor. He was born at Amsterdam, Dutch Republic, where he learned sculpture...
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  • Jean-Eugène-Charles Alberti (category Prix de Rome (Netherlands) winners)
    moved at the age of five, and then at Paris under David, and afterwards in Rome, where he copied the works of Guido Reni and Anthony van Dyck. He subsequently...
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  • Thumbnail for Joan van der Mey
    Joan van der Mey (category Prix de Rome (Netherlands) winners)
    Van der Mey was a student of Eduard Cuypers from 1898, won the Dutch Prix de Rome in 1906; he was taken on by the city of Amsterdam as an "Aesthetic Advisor"...
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  • Thumbnail for Cornelis van Eesteren
    Cornelis van Eesteren (category Prix de Rome (Netherlands) winners)
    (1929–1959) and was the chairman of the CIAM (1930–1947). He contributed to the De Stijl movement, with its founder Theo van Doesburg, the artist Piet Mondrian...
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  • Thumbnail for Tjeerd Bottema
    Tjeerd Bottema (category Prix de Rome (Netherlands) winners)
    Derkinderen, George Sturm and Nicolaas van der Waay. Winning the Dutch Prix de Rome in 1907 allowed him to make several trips to art including Italy, Spain...
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  • Kan Xuan (category Prix de Rome (Netherlands) winners)
    Amsterdam from 2002 to 2003. She received the NetherlandsPrix de Rome in 2005. During her time in the Netherlands, she created works that focus on the concepts...
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  • Thumbnail for Henri Goovaerts
    Henri Goovaerts (category Prix de Rome (Netherlands) winners)
    Academy in Amsterdam and took off during this study to compete for the Prix de Rome, which he won in 1890. He studied in Amsterdam with his friend and fellow...
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  • Thumbnail for Ferdinand de Braekeleer the Elder
    Father's Eye Sight won him the Dutch Prix de Rome in the category of historical paintings in 1819, the year in which the Prix was extended for the first time...
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  • Thumbnail for Bon Ingen-Housz
    Bon Ingen-Housz (category Prix de Rome (Netherlands) winners)
    Royal Academy of Art in The Hague from 1918 to 1946. In 1908 Ingen-Housz was the winner of the Dutch Prix de Rome. One of his students was Dirk Bus. v t e...
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  • Ed Jacobs (sculptor) (1859–1931), Dutch sculptor who won the Prix de Rome (Netherlands) in 1888 Eddie Jacobs, American tennis player, Delaware state...
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  • RAAAF (category Studios in the Netherlands)
    The studio is based in Amsterdam and was founded in 2006 by Prix de Rome (Netherlands) laureate Ronald Rietveld and philosopher Erik Rietveld. RAAAF...
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  • Thumbnail for Abraham Teerlink
    Abraham Teerlink (category Prix de Rome (Netherlands) winners)
    Prix de Rome, and hence received from King Louis Napoleon a stipend to travel to and study in Paris and Rome. He left for two years to Paris and Rome...
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  • Nico Bakker (category Prix de Rome (Netherlands) winners)
    Barbiers. Bakker worked in Amsterdam and Nieuwkoop. In 1961, he won the Prix de Rome. He worked in Switzerland for a year where he met Walter Clénin and made...
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  • Thumbnail for Gerrit Bolhuis
    Gerrit Bolhuis (category Prix de Rome (Netherlands) winners)
    the teachers Jan Bronner and Hendrik Adriaan van de Wal. He was the winner of the Dutch Prix de Rome in 1934. After a troublesome time joining, he was...
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  • Thumbnail for Theo van Reijn
    Theo van Reijn (category Prix de Rome (Netherlands) winners)
    teachers. In 1911 he won the Dutch Prix de Rome and spent a year in Rome, and in 1914 worked in Paris. Back in The Netherlands he settled in Haarlem, where...
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  • Kees Smout (category Prix de Rome (Netherlands) winners)
    and Ferdinand Leenhoff. In 1901 he won the second prize in the Dutch Prix de Rome in the category sculpture, three years later he was awarded the first...
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  • Frederik Engel Jeltsema (category Prix de Rome (Netherlands) winners)
    beeldende kunsten in Amsterdam (1899–1902). In 1902 he won the Dutch Prix de Rome. Medals, British Museum Department of Coins and; Attwood, Philip (1991)...
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