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(Text is from Wikipedia) Van den Berg studied at the Royal Academy of Art from 1929 to 1935. Van den Berg was taught there by Henk Meijer, among others.[1]
In 1932 he received a grant from the Klinkenberg Fund, which enabled him to travel to Toulon-Hyères in France. Here he put several works on paper and canvas. At the same time he received a Royal Subsidy gratuity four times. In 1937 he won first prize in the competition of the Vigelius legacy at the KABK.[2] In 1956 he received the Jacob Hartog Prize.[3] Van den Berg has had exhibitions in both the Netherlands and abroad. In 1964 he designed a postage stamp for the PTT.[4]
Van den Berg was occupied with painting, drawing (with pencil, crayon, pen and charcoal), etching and wood - and linocutting. Common genres that he practiced were: nudes, still lifes, landscapes and portraits. His style fell in the modern-realistic plane.
In The Hague, Van den Berg was a striking figure: as a person with a growth disorder, he rode through the city on an adapted scooter.[5] He was a well-known face in the art community. He was a member of Pulchri Studio, Teekengenootschap Pictura and the Hague Watercolourists.[1] After a long illness, he died on 14 November 1978. He was buried in Amersfoort.[6]
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