# Adrianus Eversen artist context and auction value notes

Canonical page: https://appraisily.com/artist/adrianus-eversen/
Profile generated: 2026-05-11T17:47:41.266Z
Quality: high confidence, strong sources

## Artist identity

- Birth date: 1818-01-13
- Death date: 1897-12-01
- Nationality: Dutch
- Movements: 19th-century Dutch Romantic painting
- Common media: oil on panel, oil on canvas, watercolor

## About Adrianus Eversen

Adrianus Eversen (1818–1897) was a Dutch painter, watercolorist, and draftsman best known for his finely detailed cityscapes and village scenes. Born in Amsterdam on January 13, 1818, he spent his career depicting the streets, canals, markets, and squares of Dutch towns, often drawing inspiration from the golden-age cityscape tradition of the seventeenth century while working in a nineteenth-century Romantic idiom. His paintings typically feature lively anecdotal detail—figures going about daily errands, horse-drawn carts on cobblestones, and sunlight falling across brick facades. Eversen died in Delft on December 1, 1897. A scholarly biography with an illustrated oeuvre catalogue, published around 2010, has strengthened the foundation for attribution and dating of his work. His paintings are held in Dutch public collections documented by the RKD and appear regularly at international auction.

## Common works and media

Eversen primarily produced oil paintings on panel and canvas, as well as watercolors and drawings. His most recognizable subjects are Dutch town and village views: canal-side streetscapes, bustling market squares, church interiors or facades, and winter scenes with frozen waterways and figures on ice. Many works are modestly sized cabinet paintings, though larger exhibition-scale canvases also exist. Collectors may also encounter drawn studies and watercolor sketches. Signed works are typical, and the 2010 oeuvre catalogue provides a reference for comparing style, palette, and compositional motifs.

## Market and appraisal context

Eversen's work appears frequently at auction, with hundreds of lots recorded across major and regional houses. Key factors collectors and appraisers weigh include subject (canal and market scenes tend to attract stronger interest than simpler village views), overall size and compositional complexity, panel versus canvas support, condition of the paint surface and panel, and documented provenance. The existence of a published oeuvre catalogue aids attribution, though collectors should verify signatures and consult the catalogue when assessing unsigned or questionably attributed works. As with most nineteenth-century Dutch painters, realized prices range widely depending on quality and freshness to market.

## Appraisily data basis

Appraisily artist pages combine published artist-identity research from authority files and scholarly sources with auction records, auction-house context, sale dates, realized prices, and comparable lots when those records are available. For Adrianus Eversen, identity data is grounded in the RKD Netherlands Institute for Art History, Getty ULAN, VIAF, and the Library of Congress Name Authority File, supplemented by Invaluable auction-lot data.

## Sources

- RKD Netherlands Institute for Art History: https://rkd.nl/en/explore/artists/26889
- Library of Congress: https://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2011032249
- VIAF: https://viaf.org/viaf/95849020/
- Getty Vocabulary Program: https://vocab.getty.edu/page/ulan/500027116
- Wikidata: https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q1840555
- Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adrianus_Eversen
