Dirk Jansz Van Santen (1637/38 – May 23, 1708) was the foremost map and print colorist of the Dutch Golden Age, celebrated for his aesthetic sophistication, progressive use of color, hand-mixed pigments, and lavish application of gold. Born in Amsterdam to the prosperous bookseller Jan Jansz van Santen, little is known about his early life, though gaps in documentation suggest he may have spent time in France. In 1675, he married Janneke Martens of Nijmegen. He worked for the wealthy collector Laurens van der Hem (1621 - 1678), notably coloring an eleven-volume Atlas Maior by Blaeu, now held by the Österreichische Nationalbibliothek. From at least 1688, Van Santen was a member of the Amsterdam Sint Lucasgilde - an artisan guild that also included Rembrandt - indicating he may have operated his own studio, accepting commissions and selling colored pieces directly. His brilliance was well recognized in his time; his work was coveted by royalty and praised in verse, yet like most colorists of the era, he seldom signed his pieces. Today, knowledge of his work comes from scattered sources - civil records, auction catalogs, private collections, and rare bookseller notices - making direct attribution challenging. A renewed scholarly interest in the 1970s, led by Fontaine Verwey and W. K. Gnirrep, helped identify his style and catalog examples in major libraries. Though few works can be definitively credited to him, Van Santen's legacy is recognizable through his unique visual language.

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