
Northern Renaissance painter Quentin Matsys (1466-1530) founded the Antwerp school of painting, which dominated Flemish art throughout the 16th century. Born in Leuven, he reportedly worked as an ironsmith before turning to painting, allegedly after falling in love with an artist's daughter. In 1491 he became a master in the Antwerp painters' guild and spent the next four decades creating religious altarpieces and satirical genre scenes. His work bridges the devotional tradition of earlier Flemish masters with a new interest in Italian Renaissance techniques and moralizing secular subjects. The great German artist Albrecht Dürer visited his studio in 1520, recording the meeting in his travel diary, allowing the two to exchange ideas on engraving and portraiture.
Matsys drew heavily from the legacies of Rogier van der Weyden and Hans Memling while incorporating influences from Leonardo da Vinci, whose drawings circulated in print form among northern artists. His most celebrated work, The Moneylender and His Wife (1514), depicts a banker weighing coins while his wife glances up from a devotional book, suggesting the tension between worldly wealth and spiritual obligations. Gold and pearls represent lust, while a rosary symbolizes the faithful path ignored. The Ugly Duchess (c. 1513) showcases his talent for grotesque satire and may have inspired John Tenniel's illustration of the Duchess in Alice in Wonderland. His sons Jan and Cornelis continued painting in his style, extending the family's artistic influence. Today, The Louvre holds The Moneylender and His Wife, while the National Gallery in London displays The Ugly Duchess.
11 paintings catalogued with museum locations

Quentin Matsys
Gemäldegalerie, Berlin, Berlin

Quentin Matsys
National Gallery, London

Quentin Matsys
National Gallery of Ancient Art (GNAA), Rome, Rome

Quentin Matsys
Gemäldegalerie, Berlin, Berlin

Quentin Matsys
Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia

Quentin Matsys
Louvre, Paris, Paris

Quentin Matsys
Museo del Prado, Madrid, Madrid

Quentin Matsys
Kunstmuseum Liechtenstein, Vaduz, Liechtenstein

Quentin Matsys
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

Quentin Matsys
National Gallery, London

Quentin Matsys, 1514
Louvre, Paris, Paris
8 museums display Matsys's works. Click any museum to see visiting info and the specific works they hold.


Paris, France
2 works on display


London, UK
2 works on display

Madrid, Spain
1 work on display

Amsterdam, Netherlands
1 work on display


Berlin, Germany
2 works on display

Philadelphia, United States
1 work on display

Rome, Italy
1 work on display

Liechtenstein, Unknown
1 work on display
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