Gillis II Coignet
Gillis II Coignet (September 1586[1] in Antwerp – after 1641 in Antwerp[2]) was a Flemish history and landscape painter.
Gillis II was the son of Jacob Coignet (III) and Hester van Beringen.[3] He married Magdalena van der Beken on 29 September 1609. He had at least nine children: Jacob, Joanna, Anna, Egidius, Hester, Barbara, Michiel, Maria, Gulielmus.[4] He joined the Guild of St. Luke in 1607 as a master's son.[5] He was active until at least 1641/42.
Gillis' style resembles that of Gillis van Coninxloo and the Frankenthal school. Gillis' son Jacob was also a painter.
Works
Name | Dates | Years |
---|---|---|
Orpheus plays for the animals, oil on copper, diameter 39,5 cm, Koninklijk Museum voor Schone Kunsten Brussel, inv. 11240 (90). | ||
Rural road with river, 1621, pen on parchment, verkoop P. de Boer, Amsterdam. | 1934 | |
Adam and Eve, 37,5 x 26 cm, also ascribed to C.C. van Haarlem, Sotheby's. | 20 April | 1977 |
Landscape with trees, panel, 20 x 51 cm, Sotheby Parke Bernet, London. | 10 December | 1980 |
Riverine landscape, panel, 16 x 32 cm, Sotheby Parke Bernet, London. | 16 February | 1983 |
Die Allegorie des wassers, oil on copper, 26 x 34,5 cm, also ascribed to Jan van Kessel, Dorotheum, Wien. | 6 May | 1996 |
(1) Sint-Francis and the animals, oil on copper, 42,5 x 51 cm, Campo Vlaamse Kaai, Antwerpen. | 10–11 December | 1996 |
(2) The temptation in the Garden of Eden, oil on copper, 42,5 x 51 cm, Phillips, London together with (1). | 10 December 1991 | 1996 |
Riverine landscape with trees (ascribed), oil on copper, 17,5 x 22,6 cm, De Vuyst Archived 2018-09-12 at the Wayback Machine. | 2015 |
Sources
- Meskens, Ad (1998). Familia Universalis: Coignet. Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Antwerp.
- Rombouts, Philip Felix; van Lerius, Theodoor (1874). De liggeren en andere historische archieven der Antwerpsche Sint Lucasgilde. Baggerman.
References
- SAA (City Archives Antwerp) PR42 C23; PR46, f309v, St-Jacobskerk: 12-9-1586; Pk3573; SR636, f1r-v.
- SAA Pk3573; N2535, dd. 6 juni 1639; V1419, dd. 22 jan 1650; N3763, dd. 25-2-1646, f34r-35r.
- SAA PR42 C23; PR46, f309v, St-Jacobskerk: 12-9-1586. Some art historians have hypothesized wrongly that he is the son of Gillis Coignet.
- Ad Meskens (1998) p.181.
- P. Rombouts & T. van Lerius (1874) II, p.442
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