Cornelis Galle the Elder

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Mary Queen of Heaven
Warsaw University Library
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Cornelis Galle the Elder (1576 – 29 March 1650), a younger son of

Guild of St Luke in 1610. One of his pupils was Giovanni Florimi
of Siena.

Prior to his visit to Italy, he engraved some plates in the dry, stiff style of his father, of which the best known are:

The following are the most esteemed of his later prints:

Portraits

Subjects after various masters

Pompa Funebris Albert VII
The Four Fathers of the Church, after Rubens
  • Adam and Eve; after Giov. Batt. Paggi
  • The Holy Family returning from Egypt, with a Choir of Angels; after the same
  • Venus caressing Cupid; after the same
  • St. Peter baptizing St. Priscia; after the same
  • The Virgin and Infant, to whom St. Bernard is offering a Book; after Francesco Vanni
  • The Crucifixion, with the Virgin, St. Francis, and St. Theresa; after the same
  • Venus bound to a Tree, and Minerva chastising Cupid; after Agostino Carracci
  • Procne showing the Head of her son Itys to her husband Tereus; after the same
  • Seneca in the Bath; after the same
  • The Virgin caressing the Infant Jesus; after Raphael
  • The Entombment of Christ; after the same
  • The Virgin Mary, under an arch, ornamented with flowers by Angels; after Rubens
  • Judith cutting off the Head of Holofernes; after the same
  • The Four Fathers of the Church; after the same
  • A naked Woman grinding colours; after the same
  • Autumn and Winter; two landscapes; after the same
  • A Banquet, with Musicians; without the name of the painter

References

  • Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainBryan, Michael (1886). "GALLE, Cornelis the Elder". In Graves, Robert Edmund (ed.). Bryan's Dictionary of Painters and Engravers (A–K). Vol. I (3rd ed.). London: George Bell & Sons.

External links