Meit's date of birth at Worms on the
Rhine is unknown, and his early life and training are not recorded. He was employed at the court of
Frederick III, Elector of Saxony before 1506 and came to work at the
Wittenberg court at the request of
Lucas Cranach the Elder, where he probably worked in Cranach's workshop between 1505 and 1511. He then went to
Middelburg to work for
Philip of Burgundy, the illegitimate son of
Philip the Good,
Duke of Burgundy, who was later to be suddenly made
Bishop of Utrecht. From 1514 until her death in 1530 Meit was
court sculptor to the Archduchess
Margaret of Austria, the regent of the Netherlands, mainly based at
Mechelen. In 1534 he moved to Antwerp, buying a house there and joining the
Guild of St Luke there in 1536. Works produced by Meit there are documented until 1544, but were all lost to later
iconoclasm.
Tomb group at Brou For Margaret of Austria Meit made his most famous works, the figures on the group of three monumental royal tombs for Margaret, her husband
Philibert II, Duke of Savoy and his mother
Margaret of Bourbon, produced from 1526 to 1531. These are at the then newly built
Royal Monastery of Brou,
Bourg-en-Bresse, today in France, but then in the province of
Bresse, part of the
Duchy of Savoy. The Late Gothic architectural surrounds were already mostly completed, but not installed, by a Flemish team, and Meit's team added the five life-size effigy figures and the many smaller figures. Meit's team was himself and three assistants, one of whom was his brother. By no means all the carving of the figures seems to be by Meit himself, and for example he does not seem to have carved any of the putti himself, though he may well have designed them. Philibert had died at the age of 24 in 1504, so Meit's images of him are based on other portraits, and rather idealized. His majestic grave monument is placed in the middle of the Abbey's choir, with the two female tombs set against the wall on either side of it. The three aligned figures are turned towards each other, as though in communication. Though to the side, Margaret's tomb is the largest. Philibert's tomb consists of two levels and two effigies, one above the other. The upper part, in expensive imported white
Carrara marble, represents the Duke in ceremonial costume, surrounded by Italian-style angels (
putti). Below this ten small female figures, called the
sibyls, point towards the lower effigy, which shows him naked except for a cloth over his genitals. The putti used to be turned to face the effigy, but in a modern restoration several were turned to face outwards. Margaret of Austria's tomb also has an upper effigy in marble and a lower one in alabaster. In the upper one she is shown as an older woman (she died at 50) in full state dress, wearing the crown-like
archducal hat. Below she is shown in her youth, wearing a loose robe with her long hair unbound, and somewhat idealized. The two lower figures of the married couple vary the normal "transi" or
cadaver tomb iconography, where a lower figure is shown as decayed remains, and connects to a broader theme of Resurrection in the abbey's art. Below their formal effigies, the couple are shown in their most perfect state, as they would be at the
resurrection of the dead. To the north, the tomb of Margaret of Bourbon consists of a single effigy placed within an
enfeu and lying upon a piece of black marble, with
pleurants beneath, a traditional Burgundian feature. The princess is dressed in an
ermine cloak and her feet rest on a
greyhound, symbol of loyalty. Behind the effigy,
putti bear
escutcheons with the initials of Margaret and
her husband. File:Bourg en Bresse eglise de brou 016.JPG|Margaret of Austria's tomb File:Eglise de Brou4 marguerite d'autriche.jpg|Margaret of Austria, upper effigy File:Eglise de Brou5 marguerite d'autriche.jpg|Margaret of Austria, lower effigy File:Eglise de Brou7 Philibert II de Savoie.jpg|Top level of Philibert's tomb File:Monestir de Brou Filibert II.jpg|Philibert's upper effigy File:Church brou angels.jpg|Putti around Philibert's tomb File:Bourg en Bresse eglise de brou 024.JPG|One of the Sibyl figures on the base of Philibert's tomb File:Bourg en Bresse eglise de brou 020.JPG|Margaret of Bourbon's effigy
Other large works of the financier
Jakob Fugger, c.1512–15 When the young
Philibert of Chalon,
Prince of Orange died in war on 3 August 1530, his mother Philiberta of Luxembourg decided to honour him in the most grandiose way possible. After a princely funeral at
Lons-le-Saunier on 25 October 1530, she hired Conrad Meit and another famous artist of the time, Jean-Baptiste Mario of
Florence, to create a fitting tomb. They began work at the church of Cordeliers de Lons-le-Saunier immediately after completing work on the tombs at Brou Abbey. Work on Philibert's unfinished tomb was abandoned in 1534 after Philiberta died and a fire destroyed the church; a portion remained visible in 1637 but it was later completely destroyed. The work included 25 life-size statues, now lost, and the Virgin and Child now at
Brussels Cathedral. Another project for Tongerloo Abbey, just outside Antwerp, included 16 life-size statues, now lost, for which he received a payment in 1542. He also carved a
Pietà, now in
Besançon Cathedral, at the request of Margaret of Austria's chaplain, the Abbot Antoine de Montécut. The abbey of Saint Vincent de Besançon received it from the Abbot and displayed it in a small chapel dedicated to
Our Lady of Sorrows. Among his other works are two sculptures of Mary holding the baby Jesus, one at the
Cathedral of St. Michael and St. Gudula in
Brussels, and the other at the Benedictine Abbey in
Saint-Amand-les-Eaux.
Portraits and statuettes From surviving letters, Margaret had initially sought out Meit for his reputation as a portraitist, and he produced a range of portraits of her and her many relations. A terracotta bust of her nephew
Charles V is now kept at the Gruuthuse Museum,
Bruges. He produced a great quantity of small sculptures in bronze and boxwood, with some of the nudes, such as
Adam and Eve (there are a number of pairs) and
Judith with the Head of Holophernes, often similar in style to the paintings of Cranach. A striking wood
Lucretia in the
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, is in a more expressive style. There is also an early
Falconer in Vienna, and a wood
Entombment in Munich. Together, these works look forward to later small-scale sculpture in the German Renaissance. Meit's portraits of Margaret varied between those showing her at the age when her husband was still alive, before Meit knew her, and those showing her at her age when they were made, and also reflect her different roles as Regent, archduchess, widow and family member. Some remain in the main
Habsburg collections in
Vienna. There are also small boxwood busts of Philibert and Margaret in the
Waddesdon Bequest in the
British Museum, with similar ones in Berlin and Munich; a larger pair in marble, for her library, are now lost. An alabaster head, perhaps representing
Cicero, is in the
Getty Museum. There are bronzes, which are probably designed by Meit but with others doing the casting. File:Grablegung Christi BNM.jpg|Wood
Entombment in Munich, dated 1496 File:Archduchess Margaret of Austria by Conrat Meit.JPG|Margaret of Austria in painted wood, Vienna File:Conrat Meit Margarethe von Österreich c1518 BNM.jpg|Margaret of Austria, c. 1518, Munich File:Conrad meit, med. di carlo V, 1520 ca..JPG|
Medal of
Emperor Charles V, about 1520 File:Kunsthistorisches Museum 09 04 2013 Eve Conrat Meit 1.jpg|
Eve, in
boxwood, c. 1530, Vienna File:Conrad_Meit_-_Adam_und_Eva,_c._1510-17_(detail).png|Adam and Eve, c. 1510-1517, in
boxwood ==Fame==