Abraham de Verwer (1585, Haarlem - 19 August 1650 (buried), Amsterdam), was a Dutch Golden Age painter of cityscapes, (river) landscapes and seascapes.
He was also called Abraham de Verweer van Burghstrate.[1] [2]
It is unknown who taught him to paint, but he was noted in his wife's testament in Haarlem in 1607 as a "schrijnwerker" or cabinet-maker, and in 1614 he was noted in an Amsterdam estate inventory as a painter.[1]
He travelled in France from 1637 to 1639,[1] and seven views along the Seine in Paris are known, as well as three more at the Musée Carnavalet and one at the Institut Néerlandais, Paris.[1] Frederick Henry, Prince of Orange, was a client who purchased two cityscapes of the Louvre and two other paintings for 400 guilders in 1639.[1] [3] Verwer returned to Amsterdam, where he obtained citizenship on 23 January 1641, and bought a house on Prinsengracht in 1642.[1]
He was the father of the Amsterdam poet Catharina Verwers and the Amsterdam painter Justus de Verwer.[1] [4]
He was buried in the Oude Kerk, Amsterdam.[1] [2]