SELLAER, Vincent
(active 1538-1544, Mechelen)

Biography

Flemish painter who lived in Flanders in the 16th century, and specialized in the painting of nude women, such as Cleopatra, Suzanna, Leda and Judith. Van Mander referred to a painter in Mechelen named Vincent Geldersman who painted a half-length figure of Leda, a Susanna, a Cleopatra with the asp and 'other such things of which very many copies are to be seen'. Contemporary inventories confirm the identification of Geldersman with Sellaer. It is probable that two, possibly three, generations of painters bore the name and are traceable in the documentation.

Nevertheless, scholars have determined that Sellaer seems to have been the foremost painter in Mechelen, and his patrons probably belonged to the court and the city's Great Council. He occupies a unique place in Netherlandish art of this period, as the monumentality of form which he achieved was almost unprecedented. His ability to seamlessly fuse both northern and Italian sources was the key to the success of him and his workshop.



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