thumb|Portrait of Jan van Scorel by [[Antonis Mor (1560)]]

thumb|upright=1.2|The dying [[Cleopatra (c.1522)]]

thumb|Obervellach, St.Martin's church, Frangipani-Altar

Jan van Scorel (1 August 1495 – 6 December 1562

He differed from most Romanists in that he was a native of the northern Netherlands and not of Flanders and that he remained most of his life in the northern Netherlands. He settled permanently in Utrecht in 1530 and established a large workshop on the Italian model. The workshop mainly produced altarpieces, many of which were destroyed in the Reformation iconoclasm in the years just after his death. He also held clerical appointments. This did not stop him from having a long-time relationship with a mistress who may have modelled for some of his female figures.

Biography

right|thumb|Cornelis Aerentsz van der Dussen (c. 1535)

Van Scorel was born in Schoorl, north of Alkmaar and close to Egmond Abbey. It is not known whether he began his studies under the Master of Alkmaar, Pieter Gerritsz in Haarlem, Jacob Cornelisz in Amsterdam, or with Jan Gossaert in Utrecht, but it is certain that the last two were the master painters he would meet later in his life and who would have the greatest effect on his technique. Van Scorel is recorded in Haarlem in 1517 where he perhaps collaborated with his contemporary Maarten van Heemskerck, who like him, had been born close to Alkmaar (they certainly collaborated in Haarlem in 1528).

In 1524 Jan Gossaert is recorded at Duurstede Castle, near Utrecht, where Jan van Scorel was his pupil. Van Scorel began traveling through Europe in his early twenties after visiting Utrecht. In 1518–22 he is registered in Venice, Perhaps because of the work on this polder, he is registered in Haarlem in 1528,

  • Rijksmuseum Amsterdam

References

  • Short biography
  • Guide to pictures on-line
  • Literature on Jan van Scorel