Dirk Hannema (16 September 1895 – 7 July 1984) was a controversial museum director and art collector. The Museum Boijmans flourished under his directorship, but he was also arrested and interned for eight months for his conduct during the German occupation of the Netherlands during World War II. Further, his reputation was severely damaged when he inaccurately attributed various forgeries to the painter Johannes Vermeer, among others. However, a quarter century after his death, he was at least partially vindicated when Le Blute-Fin Mill, a painting he had championed (to universal scorn) as a van Gogh, was finally authenticated as being by the renowned painter.
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| - Dirk Hannema (en)
- Dirk Hannema (nl)
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| - Dirk Hannema (16 September 1895 – 7 July 1984) was a controversial museum director and art collector. The Museum Boijmans flourished under his directorship, but he was also arrested and interned for eight months for his conduct during the German occupation of the Netherlands during World War II. Further, his reputation was severely damaged when he inaccurately attributed various forgeries to the painter Johannes Vermeer, among others. However, a quarter century after his death, he was at least partially vindicated when Le Blute-Fin Mill, a painting he had championed (to universal scorn) as a van Gogh, was finally authenticated as being by the renowned painter. (en)
- Dirk Hannema (Batavia, 16 september 1895 – Wijhe, 7 juli 1984) was directeur van het Museum Boijmans in Rotterdam en oprichter van de , waaruit na zijn overlijden Museum de Fundatie voortkwam. Hannema transformeerde het Museum Boijmans van een in een oud gebouw gevestigde beperkte collectie tot een modern en fraai gehuisvest museum met een kwalitatief hoogstaande collectie en een internationale reputatie. (nl)
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| - Dirk Hannema (16 September 1895 – 7 July 1984) was a controversial museum director and art collector. The Museum Boijmans flourished under his directorship, but he was also arrested and interned for eight months for his conduct during the German occupation of the Netherlands during World War II. Further, his reputation was severely damaged when he inaccurately attributed various forgeries to the painter Johannes Vermeer, among others. However, a quarter century after his death, he was at least partially vindicated when Le Blute-Fin Mill, a painting he had championed (to universal scorn) as a van Gogh, was finally authenticated as being by the renowned painter. (en)
- Dirk Hannema (Batavia, 16 september 1895 – Wijhe, 7 juli 1984) was directeur van het Museum Boijmans in Rotterdam en oprichter van de , waaruit na zijn overlijden Museum de Fundatie voortkwam. Hannema transformeerde het Museum Boijmans van een in een oud gebouw gevestigde beperkte collectie tot een modern en fraai gehuisvest museum met een kwalitatief hoogstaande collectie en een internationale reputatie. In de Tweede Wereldoorlog raakte hij in opspraak door steeds nauwere banden met de bezetter aan te knopen. Na de oorlog werd hij geïnterneerd en veroordeeld. Hij mocht geen directeur meer zijn van het museum Boijmans. Daarna begon hij met het opbouwen van een eigen collectie die uiteindelijk werd ondergebracht in Kasteel het Nijenhuis bij Heino en in het Museum de Fundatie in Zwolle. (nl)
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