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Beautiful watercolor by Wim Bosma, Prinseneiland Amsterdam. dated 1929. Very nicely framed.
Willem (Wim) Bosma, Amsterdam 1902-1985
Amsterdam, Prinseneiland Amsterdam,
watercolour, dated 1929, 30 x 28 cm
Willem (Wim) Bosma (Amsterdam, September 21, 1902 - December 28, 1985) was a Dutch painter, watercolorist, graphic designer, monumental artist and wall painter.
He was self-taught but did receive lessons from Piet van Wijngaerdt.
Bosma had a studio at Stadhouderskade 100 in Amsterdam. He painted and watercolored landscapes, harbours, figures, railway viaducts, trains, boats and flying machines in a constructive expressionist style. Among his best-known works are the stations and harbors from the 1930s, painted in a new businesslike, realistic style. After 1945, in addition to technical subjects, other motifs also entered his work. A favorite subject in his work was the African woman. Bosma was a lover of jazz music.
Work by Wim Bosma has been purchased by, among others, the Centraal Museum in Utrecht, the Gemeentemuseum The Hague, the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam and private collectors.
(catawiki)
When purchasing, the work can be picked up in Borne, Overijssel (near Hengelo, The Hague is also an option in consultation. The period for collection, if paid in advance, is very long, in other words the buyer can pick up the work weeks or even months later. We can also ship the work with Postnl.