VELLERT, Dirck Jacobsz. - b. ~1480 Amsterdam, d. 1547 Antwerpen - WGA

VELLERT, Dirck Jacobsz.

(b. ~1480 Amsterdam, d. 1547 Antwerpen)

Netherlandish glass painter. He was born in Amsterdam and he became member of the Antwerp Guild of St Luke in 1511. He is perhaps most famous as a designer of stained glass. Almost all of his monumental work has been lost, the only surviving ensemble is the series of windows that he designed in 1517 for King’s College Chapel, Cambridge for Henry VIII. Although he was praised during his lifetime, his name and works were largely forgotten by the 17th century.

Christ Rescuing St Peter from the Sea
Christ Rescuing St Peter from the Sea by

Christ Rescuing St Peter from the Sea

St Bernard Adoring the Christ Child
St Bernard Adoring the Christ Child by

St Bernard Adoring the Christ Child

Dirk Jacobsz. Vellert was influenced by Jan Gossart early on in his career, when he began to fill his prints with Italian Renaissance ornament and classically inspired architectural settings in carefully measured spaces, as in the present print.

St Luke Painting the Virgin
St Luke Painting the Virgin by

St Luke Painting the Virgin

Dirk Jacobsz. Vellert was influenced by Jan Gossart early on in his career, when he began to fill his prints with Italian Renaissance ornament and classically inspired architectural settings in carefully measured spaces. St Luke painting the Virgin expressed in prints some of Gossart’s achievements in his paintings of the same theme in Prague and in Vienna.

The Judgment of Cambyses
The Judgment of Cambyses by

The Judgment of Cambyses

This is Vellert’s last dated pane of glass. It is painted in medium to dark-brown grisaille combined with silver stain yellow in tones from golden yellow to a deep, reddish yellow.

The subject is taken from Herodotus: the judge Sisamnes, who had been guilty of prevarication, was arrested and punished by Cambyses, the King of Persia. For his crimes, Sisamnes was condemned to be flayed alive. Cambyses then appointed the judge’s son Otanes to serve in his father’s place. Vellert based this pane to a later account of the story, which states that Cambyses ordered Sisamnes’ skin to be hung above Otanes’ seat.

The Triumph of Faith
The Triumph of Faith by

The Triumph of Faith

The Triumph of Faith belonged to a series of panes, probably six in all, which was based on the famous poem ‘I Trionfi’ by Francesco Petrarca (1304-1374) describing the six triumphs of Love, Chastity, Death, Fame, Time, and Faith. The series is the earliest dated work of the artist.

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