Master of the 1540s
Image:The Master of the 1540s - Portrait of a young woman - Google Art Project.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Portrait of a young woman by The Master of the 1540s, oil on oak panel, 1541, Art Gallery of New South Wales
The Master of the 1540s is a notname given to an unidentified artist who was active from 1541 to 1551. The identity of this artist was first brought up by Max Jakob Friedländer in 1936.
History
The Master of the 1540s was a artist in the Netherlands that painted in a style similar to Joos van Cleve. theorised that this artist worked in van Cleve's studio and might have moved to England or Scotland after 1545. and his wife were among the subjects that this artist painted, but all of the other subjects of the artist are unknown. Max Jakob Friedländer believed that this painter was active in Antwerp due to van Schoonbeke being a patron of an Antwerp hospital.Some of the artist's work was previously attributed to Jan van Scorel. One of the artist's paintings came into the possession of Charles I of England. Portrait of a Young Man was sold at auction in Paris for FRF 360,000 on 30 May 1949.
Attribution
Friedländer attributed at least 30 paintings to one unknown artist. He dubbed the artist behind these paintings the Master of the 1540s in the 13th volume of Early Netherlandish Painting in 1936.Van den Brink determined that 16 of the paintings Friedländer attributed to the Master of the 1540s were indeed painted by the same person, but the remainder were painted by other people. However, Van den Brink discovered 7 paintings not included in Friedländer's list which were painted by the Master of the 1540s. Van den Brink's list of 23 paintings, 21 of which could be dated, includes six from 1541, two from 1542, four from 1532, five from 1544, and one each in 1545, 1547, 1550, and 1551. The majority of the artist's work was created between 1541 and 1545.