Collection: Jan Massys
Jan Massys (1509–1575), a Flemish painter of the Northern Renaissance, was born and died in Antwerp. The son of Quentin Massys, he trained under his father and became a master in the Antwerp Guild of Saint Luke in 1531. Exiled in 1544 for heretical beliefs, he spent fifteen years in Italy and France, returning to Antwerp in 1558. His early work closely imitated his father’s style, reflecting the influence of Flemish primitives and the Italian Renaissance, particularly the school of Leonardo da Vinci.
Massys painted history scenes, genre works, and landscapes. His depictions of the female nude, such as "Flora", show the influence of the School of Fontainebleau. His later works incorporated Italian and French mannerist elements, including elongated proportions and a refined, decorative approach.
Though his exile disrupted his career, Massys’s exposure to Fontainebleau and Italian mannerism influenced Flemish painting, linking Northern and Southern European traditions. His use of mythological and allegorical subjects, often with erotic themes, anticipated later Baroque genre painting in the Low Countries.