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Broederlam, Melchior
(b Ypres, c. 1355; d Ypres, c. 1411). South Netherlandish painter. Broederlams family, long-established in Ypres, provided three aldermen for the city and sided with the French Counts of Flanders against the Flemish populace. After a training that may have included contact with Jan Boudolf in Bruges before 1368 or Paris after 1370 and an extended visit to Italy, the artist became, by 1381, an official painter of the reigning count, Louis de Mâle (reg. 134684), painting leather chairs, pennons and banners. On 13 May 1384, directly after Louiss death, he was appointed a valet de chambre to the counts heir, Philip the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, and in 1385 was sent to live in the castle at Hesdin, Artois, in order to supervise the rebuilding of its galleries of entertainment and to paint the walls according to a plan devised by Philip himself.
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