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Source Description

In 1543, Nicholas à Spira (1510-1568) was elected abbot of the abbey of the Norbertine Order at Grimbergen in the southern Netherlands (modern Belgium). He commissioned an altarpiece with his portrait on one wing and that of his patron saint, St. Nicholas, (37.2615) on the other. the painter, the little-known Jacob de Punder (or Jacques de Poindre), portrayed his client with unflinching realism. Xrays of the two panels reveal the traces of an Annunciation scene that initially would would be seen by the worshipper when the altarpiece was closed. It is now overpainted. In 1566, the abbey, like many Catholic churches and institutions in the Netherlands, was set on fire by bands of Protestant reformers bent on purging the land of idolatrous images. However, the altarpiece survived until the anticlerical campaigns of the 1790s that swept through much of western Europe with the reverberations of the French Revolution. The altarpiece was apparently dismantled then, probably in order to separate the portraits from the central panel featuring a religious subject, which was very likely destroyed.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
11636
label
Portrait of Abbot Nicholas à Spira
core
obj
dtoType
drawing
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
11636
contentType
drawing
stage
normalized
title
Portrait of Abbot Nicholas à Spira
description
In 1543, Nicholas à Spira (1510-1568) was elected abbot of the abbey of the Norbertine Order at Grimbergen in the southern Netherlands (modern Belgium). He commissioned an altarpiece with his portrait on one wing and that of his patron saint, St. Nicholas, (37.2615) on the other. the painter, the little-known Jacob de Punder (or Jacques de Poindre), portrayed his client with unflinching realism. Xrays of the two panels reveal the traces of an Annunciation scene that initially would would be seen by the worshipper when the altarpiece was closed. It is now overpainted. In 1566, the abbey, like many Catholic churches and institutions in the Netherlands, was set on fire by bands of Protestant reformers bent on purging the land of idolatrous images. However, the altarpiece survived until the anticlerical campaigns of the 1790s that swept through much of western Europe with the reverberations of the French Revolution. The altarpiece was apparently dismantled then, probably in order to separate the portraits from the central panel featuring a religious subject, which was very likely destroyed.
provenance
Abbey of Grimbergen, Brabant, 1563-late 18th century; de Malherbe Collection, Valenciennes; Sale, October 17-18, 1883, no. 46; Comte Jacques de Béraudière, Paris; Sale, Cabinet Foucart, October 10-12, 1898, no. 65; de Somzée Collection; Sale, Brussels, May 24, 1904, no. 565; Henry Walters, Baltimore, ca. 1905 [mode of acquisition unknown]; Walters Art Museum, 1931, by bequest.
date
1563 (Renaissance)
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
Painting & Drawing
paintings
portraits
imageCount
1
pageCount
1
source
import
dimensions
units
cm
width
86.4
height
60
dimensionsRaw
34 x 23 5/8 in. (86.4 x 60 cm)
Source extras
inscriptions
Signed at the left: (J)ABOBVS (D)EPUNDER FECIT; Inscribed and dated to the left: SPIRTVM RECTV INSPIRA / ANNO ETATIS SUE 53 / ANNO 1563
med
oil on panel
creator_ids
2129
collection_ids
REN
exhibition_ids
2674
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
8b82d2cf55ff0085