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Lancelot Blondeel

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Name
  
Lancelot Blondeel


Role
  
Artist

Lancelot Blondeel

Died
  
March 4, 1561, Bruges, Belgium

Lancelot Blondeel, also Lanceloot (1498 – 4 March 1561), was a Flemish painter, architect, surveyor and cartographer.

Lancelot Blondeel Lancelot Blondeel Wikipedia

Blondeel was born in Poperinge, but established himself as an artist at Bruges. He became a member of the painters' guild in 1519. He primarily painted commissioned religious themed works for local churches. In 1550 Blondeel and Jan van Scorel were commissioned to restore Jan van Eyck's celebrated Ghent Altarpiece. He founded in 1549 two triumphal arches, commissioned by Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, based on the Roman style. He also designed a canal that linked Bruges to the sea, a project that greatly promoted Bruges' trade. It is known that he had a daughter named Anna, who later married his pupil Pieter Pourbus. Blondeel died in Bruges on 4 March 1561.

Works

  • Triptyque avec les saints Côme et Damien, Bruges, Sint-Jacobskerk (1523)
  • Triptyque avec l’Histoire de la Sainte Croix, Furnes, Niklasskerk
  • Les Sept Joies de Notre-Dame, Tournai, cathédrale Notre-Dame (perhaps in collaboration with Pierre Pourbus)
  • Martyre d’un saint, New York City, private collection (1548 or 1558)
  • Le Calvaire, Nantes, Musée des Beaux-Arts
  • Vierge à l’Enfant avec saint Luc et saint Éloi, Bruges, Sint-Salvatorskathedraal (1545)
  • Saint Luc peignant la Vierge, Bruges, Groeningemuseum (1545)
  • Le Bon Samaritain, Bruges, Sint-Janshospitaal
  • References

    Lancelot Blondeel Wikipedia