Master of St Ildefonso
( fl Valladolid, second half of the 15th century). Spanish painter. He is named from St Ildefonsos Reception of a Chasuble from the Virgin Mary (Paris, Louvre), which is traditionally held to come from Valladolid; it may even have come from the chapel of S Ildefonso in the Colegiata there. The style, characterized by harmony of colour and intense expressions, resembles that of four panels of St Athanasius, St Louis of Toulouse, both enthroned, SS Peter and Paul and SS Andrew and James the Great, which probably came from the convent of La Merced, Valladolid (see Post, p. 402). They have been attributed to the Master of Ávila, but Post considered them to be the work of the Master of St Ildefonso, a more sophisticated painter, although both artists modified the harshness of their Netherlandish models. There are also similarities with Jacomarts triptych of St Anne in the Colegiata, Játiva, but these may be coincidental. Other works attributed to the Master include St Anne and St Anthony of Padua (Valladolid, Mus. N. Escul., see Post, p. 408), eight lateral panels of the retable of Don Alvaro de Luna in Toledo Cathedral and an effigy of the Virgin of the Immaculate Conception from S Pablo at Peñafiel, a little to the east of Valladolid.
Part of the Masters, anonymous, and monogrammists family
|