Artist
Christoffel Puytlinck
1640–1679
Christoffel Puytlinck was a Dutch Golden Age artist. 3 works are cataloged here, principally at Rijksmuseum. Christoffel Puytlinck was born in Roermond.
Overview
Christoffel Puytlinck, (Roermond, 11 November 1640 – Roermond, c. 1679) was a painter from Roermond (present-day Netherlands). He painted still lifes, chiefly game pieces and live and dead fowl.
Life and career
Puytlinck was born in Roermond, Limburg, in the southern part of the Netherlands, where he was baptized on 11 November 1640. His name is also spelled Puijtlinck. He was the son of Theodorus Puytlinck, a goldsmith from Roermond. He was active as a painter from 1663. He was active in Reims in 1663, and in Rome from 1667 to 1669. In Rome he joined the Bentvueghels, earning the nickname Trechter. In 1667 he was a witness in a trial regarding an English artist who was stabbed to death in Rome in Via del Babuino. In 1670 he returned to Roermond, where he was active from that year until 1679. In this period he taught Jan Frans van Douven, his cousin. He died in Roermond between 1679 and 1680.
Collections represented
Museum