Jan Provoost (Mons c. 1465 - Bruges 1529)
Jan Provoost was probably born around 1465 in Mons, Hainaut, as the son of the painter Jan Provoost the Elder. He married Jeanne de Quaroube, the widow of Simon Marmion, before 1491 in Valenciennes. On 10 February 1494 he acquired citizenship of Bruges, where his wife died in 1506. He then married Magdalena Zwaef (d. 1509), the daughter of the saddler Adriaen de Zwaef, and Katharina Beaureins, who died in 1528. Adriaen, a son by his second wife, was also a painter. A son from his third marriage, Thomas, became a glass painter. Provoost died in January 1529 and was buried in the St Gilliskerk in Bruges.
He was probably first taught by his father, and since he married the widow of Simon Marmion it is assumed that he completed his training with this famous painter and book illuminator in Valenciennes. He enrolled as a free master in the Antwerp Guild of St Luke in 1493. In Bruges he was a member of the guild of image-makers and saddlers, to which panel painters also belonged, becoming its second warden in 1501, first warden (1507, 1509, 1514), governor (1511) and dean (1519, 1525). Maximiliaen Frans is listed as his pupil in the guild ledger for 1506.
In the autumn of 1520 he met Albrecht Dürer in Antwerp, who drew his portrait. In April 1521 he travelled to Bruges with Dürer, who lodged with him there for a while. In 1523 Provoost was a member of the Brotherhood of Jerusalem Pilgrims, of which he became a regent in 1527. A condition of membership was a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, which Provoost may have made between 1498 and 1501, or 1502 and 1505.
There are no signed paintings by Jan Provoost. He received commissions for decorative work for the knights of the Order of the Golden Fleece (1509), the Bruges city authorities (1513), as well as for Emperor Charles V’s joyous entry into the city in 1520. The Virgin in the Clouds of 1524, which was intended for an altar in the St Donaaskerk in Bruges, and The Last Judgement, which he painted for the council chamber of Bruges Town Hall, are the only works that can be attributed to him on the basis of documentary evidence. Those late paintings are the key to a reconstruction of his oeuvre, which now runs to more than a hundred works, three of which are dated. It consists mainly of altarpieces and smaller panels with the Virgin or scenes from the life of Christ. There is a relatively large proportion of altarpiece wings with donor portraits which illustrate his skill as a portraitist.
In his early period, when he made many scenes of the Virgin, Provoost painted in the style of the Flemish Primitives. He was, however, an inventive and innovative artist who constantly introduced variations in his work. He combined the traditional Bruges manner with Renaissance influences, which he absorbed mainly from Quinten Massijs in Antwerp.
References
Dürer 1520 (1995), pp. 52-53, 77-78; Weale 1872; Hulin de Loo 1902; Friedländer IX, 1931, pp. 74-92; Friedländer in Thieme/Becker XXVII, 1933, p. 429; Parmentier 1941; ENP IXb, 1973, pp. 85-94; Vermandere in Turner 1996, XXI, pp. 352-57; Spronk in Bruges 1998, I, pp. 94-96
(V. Hoogland)