Question

Historians of Dutch Golden Age painting agree: there are too many Jan (“yaan”) van Kessels. For 10 points each:
[10h] Jan van Kessel the Elder was famous for his detailed paintings of these things, which he once had spell out his name. Rachel Ruysch drew on her father’s research to accurately depict these things in her still lifes of flowers.
ANSWER: insects [or arthropods or bugs; accept specific arthropods such as flies, butterflies, caterpillars, and centipedes; prompt on animals]
[10e] Jan van Kessel the Younger took his talents to Spain, where he made paintings in this genre at the court of Charles II. Hans Holbein made paintings in this genre of Thomas More and Henry VIII for the Tudor court.
ANSWER: portrait painting [or portraiture]
[10m] “The other” Jan van Kessel made many still lifes depicting products from these events. Anthony van Dyck painted Charles I dismounted during one of these events.
ANSWER: hunts [accept hunting still lifes or Charles I at the Hunt] (In addition to those three, there are at least two more painters from the mid-17th century named Jan van Kessel: Jan van Kessel of Amsterdam and the uncle of Jan van Kessel the Elder.)
<Visual Fine Arts>

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Data

Alabama AAuburn C001010
Georgia AGeorgia Tech B10101030
Georgia Tech ETennesse A0101020