Brunswick Monogrammist
The Brunswick Monogrammist or Master of the Brunswick Monogram was an anonymous Netherlandish Renaissance painter, active in the mid-to-late 16th century. He painted religious scenes but also several scenes of secular merriment, including brothel and tavern scenes, and has been called "the most significant precursor of Pieter Bruegel the Elder".
Identity
The monogram for which the Brunswick Monogrammist is named appears only once, on his Parable of the Great Supper in the Herzog Anton Ulrich Museum in Brunswick. It is composed of the interlocked letters J, V, A, M, S and L, and neither it nor careful analysis of his work have yielded consensus about his identity. His paintings have been attributed to a number of painters, including Jan van Hemessen, Mayken Verhulst and Jan van Amstel.File:Brunswick Monogrammist - Itinerant Entertainers in a Brothel.jpg|thumb|right|Itinerant Entertainers in a Brothel. Oil on wood, 45.5 cm × 60.7 cm. National Gallery, London
Partial list of works
- A Brothel Scene
- A Dispute in a Brothel
- St. John the Baptist Preaching in the Wilderness
- Ecce Homo
- The Feeding of the Poor or Feeding of the Five Thousand or Parable of the Great Supper
- Itinerant Entertainers in a Brothel
- Tavern Scene
- Road to Calvary
- Brothel scene, 1537, Gemäldegalerie, Berlin