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Horenbout: South Netherlandish
family of artists, active in England.
After achieving
some considerable success as a painter and illuminator in Ghent, in the
service of Margaret of Austria, Gerard Horenbout moved to England with
his wife and their children. This must have occurred some time between
1522 and 1525, when the name of his son Lucas
Horenbout first appeared in the royal household accounts of King Henry
VIII. Gerard's daughter Susanna Horenbout was one of the many early women
artists who were active in family workshops but whose works are no longer
known.
Gerard was a
painter, designer and cartographer. He was admitted into the guild of
painters and illuminators in Ghent in 1487. He became a versatile and
productive artist, painting altarpieces, portraits and illuminated manuscripts,
and designing tapestries and stained-glass windows. He also collaborated
with the nuns of the convent of Galilee near Ghent making a model garden
with flowers made of cloth that he delivered to Margaret of Austria, regent
of the Netherlands, at her court in Mechelen. He seems to achieved a degree
of wealth commensurate with his output. At least three of his six children
were active in his workshop from 1521 onwards. In 1512 Margaret of Austria
appointed him court painter, with a permission to maintain his workshop
at Ghent. That Gerard moved to England at the age of nearly 60 may have
been due to financial stringency at the court of Mechelen. It is uncertain
whether he ever returned to Flanders.
His known works
include illuminations in the Book of Hours of Bona Sforza (1519-20, British
Library, London). The reconstruction of his oeuvre is difficult.
Works
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