Cor Visser (26 August 1903, Spaarndam, North Holland – 27 September 1982, Ipswich) was a Dutch artist who spent much of his life living in and around Suffolk in the United Kingdom.
During the Second World War he was appointed official war artist to the Dutch royal family, then living in exile in London, where he painted many culturally important portraits of members of the royal family as well as key exiled government officials and military officers.
[1] A selection of his work is in the collections of the Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, the Victoria and Albert Museum and the National Portrait Gallery[2] in London.
He also painted Edith Pretty (Sutton Hoo, Woodbridge UK) and her son, both portrets are hanging in the estate.
He and his wife are buried in St Mary's Churchyard Wherstead Ipswich overlooking the River Orwell.