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Roome [Brussel], Jan van [Jean de Bruxelles]

( fl 1498–1521). South Netherlandish painter and designer of tapestry cartoons, stained-glass windows and sculpture. He is first documented in 1498, as a Brother of Our Lady of the Seven Sorrows, and later became court painter at Mechelen and Brussels to Margaret of Austria, Regent of the Spanish Netherlands. Jan’s widely imitated tapestry designs, filled with graceful, melancholic figures set in a mixture of Late Gothic and Renaissance architecture, helped to create a uniform style in Brussels tapestries in the first quarter of the 16th century. The basis for attributing tapestries to Jan, or his workshop, is the documented series of the Story of Herkinbald (Brussels, Musées Royaux A. & Hist.), which was made for the Confraternity of the Holy Sacrament at Leuven and for the design for which Jan was paid 2.5 Rhenish guilders and some wine in 1513. His collaborators were the painter ‘Philips’ [Maître Phillipe] and the weaver ‘Lyeon’ [Leon de Smet ( fl 1490–1524)]. In 1509–10 Jan executed designs for a carved screen for the Balienhof in Brussels. A similar screen with statues appears in Bathsheba at David’s Palace, the centrepiece of ten magnificent tapestries showing the History of David (Paris, Mus. Cluny), now attributed to Jan, for which the drawing of Bathsheba survives (Washington, DC, Corcoran Gal. A.). It is possible that this tapestry set was commissioned by Margaret of Austria, Francis I of France or Henry VIII of England. For Margaret’s funerary church at BROU, Jan designed the windows, choir-stalls and sculpture for the tombs in Flamboyant Gothic; Conrat Meit executed the memorial statues, and work was completed in 1532. Jan’s archaic style, reminiscent of Hugo van der Goes and Quinten Metsys, also incorporates Italianate influences, notably that of Perugino.

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  Reproduced by kind permission of Macmillan Publishers Limited, publishers of The Grove Dictionary of Art.
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