SITTOW, Michel - b. ~1468 Reval, d. 1525 Reval - WGA

SITTOW, Michel

(b. ~1468 Reval, d. 1525 Reval)

Flemish painter of Estonian birth. His career is well documented, though only a few securely attributed paintings survive. His work as a painter of portraits and small devotional works for princely patrons represents an international and courtly extension of the early Netherlandish school.

Much is known about Michael Sittow’s peripatetic career painting for princely patrons, but few securely attributed paintings survive. A painter’s son, he had gone to Bruges for his training around 1484 and remained until 1491, becoming a master of the elegant, chiseled style which is characteristic of the Ghent-Bruges school. He was in Spain by 30 March 1492, and seems to have been employed principally as a portraitist, court painter to Queen Isabella, although only a few works from his Spanish period survive.

Although he remained in Isabella’s service until her death in 1504, he had left Spain by late 1502. He then spent some time in the Netherlands at the courts of Philip the Fair and Margaret of Austria, and worked at the court of Christian II of Denmark, and in his Estonian hometown of Tallinn. He may also have traveled to England. By 1518 he was back in Tallinn, whose artists’ guild he had joined in 1507.

Sittow specialized in small devotional works and portraits, which often projected a melancholy mood. For Margaret of Austria, Sittow produced a type of precisely observed portrait in which his sitter wore contemporary dress, a halo, and a reserved demeanour indicating sainthood.

Manuscript illumination and Netherlandish painting of the 1400s influenced Sittow’s style. He used translucent layers of paint to achieve highly refined and subdued colour harmonies, combined with sensitivity to texture and light effects.

Assumption of the Virgin
Assumption of the Virgin by

Assumption of the Virgin

This is one of the panels which belonged to the Polyptych of Isabella the Catholic. This polyptych originally comprised forty-seven small panels (each measuring about 21 x 16 centimetres). Approximately twenty-seven survive, of which two were executed by Michel Sittow, the others by Juan de Flandes.

Coronation of the Virgin
Coronation of the Virgin by

Coronation of the Virgin

This is one of the panels which belonged to the Polyptych of Isabella the Catholic. This polyptych originally comprised forty-seven small panels (each measuring about 21 x 16 centimetres). Approximately twenty-seven survive, of which two were executed by Michel Sittow, the others by Juan de Flandes.

Pietà
Pietà by

Pietà

This rather smaller copy of the Miraflores Altarpiece by Rogier van der Weyden (c. 1440), painted in Spain by an artist from the Netherlands, Sittow or Juan de Flandes, was long thought to be the original. The painter followed his model in every detail, but in the Pietà he changed the colour of Mary’s robe from red to the conventional dark blue. The thinner, less enamel-like style of painting and the slightly broken colouring suggest the later date. The panel has been trimmed at the top.

Portrait of a Man
Portrait of a Man by

Portrait of a Man

Michel Sittow was an artist from Reval (Tallinn) who did enjoy his own career and who probably learned his trade from Memling, though he never registered as his pupil. We know from the records of a legal case he brought in L�beck against his stepfather that he came to Bruges in 1484 to learn the trade of painter, and that his apprenticeship had not ended by 1486. By 1492 he had become court painter to Isabella the Catholic. What few works of his survive owe a compositional and technical debt to Memling. It is possible that Sittow helped Memling carry out the enormous number of commissions he received in the second half of the 1480s. However, very few works of this period can be dated with precision.

This bust portrait shows the sitter in three-quarter view to the right against a plain dark green-blue background. Through the slits of a brown tabard can be seen the scarlet sleeves of his jacket, over which are wide dark blue-black revers. Sticking out of this is a short straight black collar which is open above a white shirt. On his head is a dark beret. Previously taken to be a Gossaert, it is now generally attributed to Michel Sittow, which is confirmed by the portrait’s Baltic origin.

The Mauritshuis portrait is one of those early-sixteenth-century portraits which are very close to Memling. Not only are the general framing of the figure and the green-blue background clearly related; the position of the hands pushed towards the corner of the frame is even identical. Moreover, the type and graphic modelling of the fingers belong to Memling’s formal vocabulary.

Portrait of the Danish King Christian II
Portrait of the Danish King Christian II by

Portrait of the Danish King Christian II

Michel Sittow worked for the leading noble houses of Europe. His portrait of Christian II reflects a king whose close family ties to the imperial Habsburg court drew in into the centre of European art and culture. On his subsequent travels and exile the king came into direct contact with the cultural centres of Europe.

Virgin and Child
Virgin and Child by

Virgin and Child

One painter who came as far away as present day Estonia was the unusually adroit technician Michel Sittow. His smoothly painted Virgin and Child is the left half of a diptych, the right panel of which shows the Spanish donor, Don Diego de Guevara (National Gallery of Art, Washington). Though many Eyckian elements are still in evidence, the new arts of Italy are also clearly stated, such as the Child, who is very Florentine in character.

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