词条 | Massys, Quentin |
释义 | Massys, Quentin Flemish artist Massys also spelled Matsys, Metsys, or Messys born c. 1465/66, Leuven, Brabant 【now in Belgium】 died 1530, Antwerp ![]() Trained as a blacksmith in his native Leuven, Massys is said to have studied painting after falling in love with an artist's daughter. In 1491 he went to Antwerp and was admitted into the painters' guild. ![]() ![]() Although his portraiture is more subjective and personal than that of Albrecht Dürer or Hans Holbein, Massys' painting may have been influenced by both German masters. Massys' lost “St. Jerome in His Study,” of which a copy survives in Vienna, is indebted to Dürer's “St. Jerome,” now in Lisbon. Some Italian influence may also be detected, as in “Virgin and Child” (Nationalmuseum, Poznań, Pol.), in which the figures are obviously copied from Leonardo da Vinci's “Virgin of the Rocks” (Louvre). Massys' two sons were artists. Jan (1509–75), who became a master in the guild of Antwerp in 1531, was banished in 1543 for his heretical opinions, spent 15 years in Italy or France, and returned to Antwerp in 1558. His early pictures were imitations of his father's work, but a half-length “Judith with the Head of Holofernes” of a later date, now in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, shows Italian or French influence, as does “Lot and His Daughters” (1563; Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna). Cornelis Massys (1513–79), Quentin's second son, became a master painter in 1531, painting landscapes in his father's style and also executing engravings. |
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