General , 1661 Quellinus had brought back from Italy a new vision of the role of the sculptor. The sculptor was no longer to be an ornamentalist but a creator of a total artwork in which architectural components were replaced by sculptures. The church furniture became an occasion for the creation of large-scale compositions, incorporated into the church interior. Stylistically he introduced the classicizing
Baroque style of François Duquesnoy (the so-called
la gran maniera greca) to his native
Antwerp. He thus introduced into Flemish sculpture the Baroque style developed by François Duquesnoy, which was based on
classical sculpture. One particular feature of the city hall, the so-called
vierschaar or
tribunal, reflected the fashion of the period and, in particular, the ideals of the Italian architect
Andrea Palladio and his pupils
Vincenzo Scamozzi and
Cesare Ripa. An exhibition was held, focusing on the work of Quellinus, from June to September 1977.
Funerary monuments In the Dutch Republic Artus Quellinus I was further noted for funerary monuments and portrait busts. His monumental tomb for
Otto Christoph von Sparr,
Generalfeldmarschall of
Brandenburg-Prussia, in the
St. Mary's Church, Berlin had an important influence on the development of tomb sculpture in Northern Germany. Another tomb monument he made in Germany was that for
Frederick III, Duke of Holstein-Gottorp in
Schleswig Cathedral. (1665)
Portrait sculpture Artus Quellinus I made an important contribution to Dutch portrait sculpture through a series of portraits of leading citizens such as the Burgomasters of Amsterdam, their wives and, in particular, a bust of the Grand Pensionary of Holland,
Johan de Witt and one of his uncle Amsterdam burgomaster
Andries de Graeff. The portraits combine the classical style with late Baroque devices such as the inclusion of the arms of the sitter. His sculptures were so popular in Amsterdam that the leading Dutch writers
Joost van den Vondel and
Jan Vos dedicated poems to his work. His oeuvre after his return to Antwerp in 1658 is less well known. The most important piece is undoubtedly the half-length marble portrait bust of
Luis de Benavides Carrillo, Marquis of Caracena, the Governor of the Southern Netherlands, with its realistically sculpted facial features and free flowing hair. ==References==