COLYN, Alexander - b. ~1526 Mechelen, d. 1612 Innsbruck - WGA

COLYN, Alexander

(b. ~1526 Mechelen, d. 1612 Innsbruck)

Alexander Colyn (Colijn or Colin), Flemish sculptor, active in Austria. He was one of the foremost sculptors active at the Habsburg courts in Innsbruck, Prague and Vienna, but his activities before 1558 are unclear. Colyn may have trained c. 1540 with his uncle, Symon Colyns (fl 1518–42), a sculptor or stonemason in Mechelen. It was suggested on the basis of style that the young sculptor was at Fontainebleau in the 1540s and then went to Italy, possibly to Milan. His reputation was well established by March 1558, when he is documented working on the façade sculpture of the Otto Heinrich Wing of Heidelberg Castle with 12 journeymen. In 1559 or 1560 he returned to Mechelen where two years later he married Marie de Vleeschouwer, probably the daughter of Anthoni de Vleeschouwer (d 1558), a sculptor whom Colyn succeeded at Heidelberg. Late in 1562 Colyn moved to Innsbruck where he spent most of the rest of his career.

Façade of the Otto Heinrich Wing
Façade of the Otto Heinrich Wing by

Façade of the Otto Heinrich Wing

Alexander Colyn of Mechelen was a pupil of Meit, brought the decorative manner of the Flemish Renaissance to Heidelberg.

Heidelberg was the capital of the humanist Otto Heinrich, whose palace was ornamented with sturdy caryatids and allegories.

Tomb of Emperor Maximilian I
Tomb of Emperor Maximilian I by

Tomb of Emperor Maximilian I

Emperor Maximilian’s ornate black marble cenotaph occupies the center of the nave. Florian Abel (died 1565), of the Prague imperial court, supplied a full-sized draft of the high tomb in the florid style of court Mannerism. Its construction took more than 80 years. The sarcophagus itself was completed in 1572, and the final embellishments — the kneeling emperor, the four virtues, and the iron grille — were added in 1584.

Alexander Colyn created 24 white marble reliefs for the tomb, based on woodcuts from the Triumphal Arch by Albrecht D�rer.

Tomb of Emperor Maximilian I (detail)
Tomb of Emperor Maximilian I (detail) by

Tomb of Emperor Maximilian I (detail)

Emperor Maximilian’s ornate black marble cenotaph occupies the center of the nave. Florian Abel (died 1565), of the Prague imperial court, supplied a full-sized draft of the high tomb in the florid style of court Mannerism. Its construction took more than 80 years. The sarcophagus itself was completed in 1572, and the final embellishments — the kneeling emperor, the four virtues, and the iron grille — were added in 1584.

Alexander Colyn created 24 white marble reliefs for the tomb, based on woodcuts from the Triumphal Arch by Albrecht D�rer. The figure of the emperor dominates every scene and the artist manages to convey the aging of the emperor in each consecutive scene.

The picture shows the relief depicting the Marriage of Maximilian to Mary of Burgundy in 1477.

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