New production debuting at San Antonio's Overtime Theater deals in art, intrigue
Born in the Netherlands in 1889, Han van Meegeren aspired to be recognized as a great painter but got pigeonholed for his obsession with bygone eras, specifically the Dutch Golden Age. After finding limited success with his nostalgia-fueled originals, he began forging works by 17th-century masters including Johannes Vermeer. As part of his practice, van Meegeren purchased 17th-century canvases, made his own brushes from badger fur, mixed paints using period-specific formulas and “aged” his finished works hundreds of years by coating them with phenol formaldehyde resin and cracking them with a rolling pin.
Recent Posts

ICE prosecutor who runs racist X account returns to Dallas immigration court

Texas A&M abruptly cancels ethics course over race, gender policy

Supernatural trivia night coming to San Antonio’s Schaefer Library

Chef Geronimo Lopez leaving Hotel Emma for San Antonio Food Bank

Senate hopeful Talarico rolls out ‘anti-corruption’ agenda as he takes 9-point lead in new polling

Pro-Palestinian activist, veteran Greg Stoker running against ‘ShamWow Guy’ for Congress in Austin

Texas congresswoman Jasmine Crockett calls for Kristi Noem’s impeachment

Lucy Cooper’s Ice House files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization

San Antonio’s Alamo acquires original cannon used in 1836 battle

San Antonio documentary showing will examine lasting impact of ’70s Chicano art collective

"My job is to find and attract mastery-based agents to the office, protect the culture, and make sure everyone is happy! "
