Massys, Quentin
(b. 1465/66, Leuven, d. 1530, Antwerpen)

Quentin Massys (also spelled Matsys, Metsys, or Messys), Flemish artist, the first important painter of the Antwerp school.
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.
Among Massys' early works are two pictures of the Virgin and Child. His most celebrated paintings are two large triptych altarpieces, The Holy Kinship, (or St Anne Altarpiece) ordered for the St Pieterskerk in Leuven (1507-09), and The Entombment of the Lord (c. 1508-11), both of which exhibit strong religious feeling and precision of detail. His tendency to accentuate individual expression is demonstrated in such pictures as The Old Man and the Courtesan and The Moneylender and His Wife. Christus Salvator Mundi and The Virgin in Prayer display serene dignity. Pictures with figures on a smaller scale are a polyptych, the scattered parts of which have been reassembled, and a later Virgin and Child. His landscape backgrounds are in the style of one of his contemporaries, the Flemish artist Joachim Patenier; the landscape depicted in Massys' The Crucifixion is believed to be the work of Patinier. Massys painted many notable portraits, including one of his friend Erasmus.
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, Poznan, Poland), in which the figures are obviously copied from Leonardo da Vinci's Virgin of the Rocks (Louvre, Paris).

Works