About the artist
Roelof Frankot was a Dutch painter and photographer, born in Meppel on October 25, 1911. He was originally trained as a photographer, a background that permanently influenced his sense of composition, light, and rhythm. Around 1930, he began to focus increasingly intensely on painting, in which he developed a completely unique, free, and expressive style.
Frankot is best known for his colorful, dynamic paintings in which spontaneity and movement take center stage. His later work shows a strong affinity with the visual language of the CoBrA movement, although he was not an official member of the group. Like the CoBrA artists, he worked intuitively and experimentally, with powerful brushstrokes, playful forms, and a strong emphasis on emotion and directness. His compositions often balance abstraction and figuration and evoke associations with landscapes, cities, music, and human figures.
In addition to being a painter, Frankot was also active as a photographer, which means his oeuvre displays a unique interplay between observation and imagination. His work radiates an optimistic energy and is characterized by a vibrant treatment of color and an almost musical rhythm. Over the years, he grew into a prominent figure in post-war Dutch art, with an oeuvre that is still appreciated for its freedom, spontaneity, and poetic power.















































