Martin Baes
Martin Baes, latinised as Bassius[1][2] (fl. 1604–1637)[3] was a Flemish engraver and printmaker who mainly worked for the publishers in Saint-Omer, Tournai, Arras and Douai.[4] He worked on a number of religious publications that were aimed at English Catholics.[3]
Life
Very little is known about the life of this artist. On stylistic grounds it is assumed that he trained as an engraver in Antwerp.[3] He was therefore possibly a native of Antwerp.[2] Martin Baes worked for the publishers in Saint-Omer in 1614, Tournai in 1617, Arras in 1623 and Douai in 1618-1623.[4]
Most of what is known about him is based on his surviving works. He primarily produced portraits.[5] He possibly died in Doornik.[2]
gollark: > Windows *10*
gollark: > random text in base32> rainbow colors> Windows
gollark: Ah, Terminator. The cool terminal emulator.
gollark: And again, no GUIs.
gollark: But it's stuck running under the NT kernel.
References
- Family name also: 'Basse' or 'Bas'
- Martin Baes at The Netherlands Institute for Art History (in Dutch)
- Alexander Soetaert, Martinus Bas Fecit Duaci, at: Transregional History KU Leuven Research: Crossing Borders in Early Modern Times
- Edm. De Busscher, BAES, Martin in: Biographie nationale de Belgique, Tome 1, p. 636-638 (in French)
- "Martin Baes Works at the National Portrait Gallery". Retrieved 2018-04-30.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.