Vander Meulen was born in 1645 in
Mechelen, the son of Pieter, originally from
Erondegem, and Elisabeth Schuermans from Mechelen. At the time Mechelen was one of the prime centres of sculpture making in Flanders, next only to
Antwerp. Pieter van der Stock had himself started his traineeship only five years earlier under Coenraet van Kerckhoven. Vander Meulentravelled to England in 1675 where he joined the London workshop of the (
Rotterdam-born) English sculptor Grinling Gibbons. Gibbons was mainly known as a sculptor for his fine carvings of floral motifs. Other experienced Flemish sculptors such as
Arnold Quellin (the son of
Artus Quellinus II),
John Nost, Anthony Verhuke and Peter van Dievoet also worked in Gibbon's London workshop as "servants", i.e., collaborators. As these Flemish artists were not trainees, they were never entered in the Draper's records. In a document dated 1679 van der Meulen, Quellin and Verhuke are referred to as servants of Gibbons. In the Gibbons workshop he worked on various commissions but the contributions of the various artists active in the workshop are not always identifiable. He is known to have collaborated with Peter van Dievoet on the creation of the
statue of King James II during his stay in the workshop of
Grinling Gibbons. he married Cornelia Theresia de Croes. His wife's sister Joanna Maria was married to the sculptor Jan Lucas Faydherbe, son of the prominent Mechelen sculptor
Lucas Faydherbe. Van der Meulen had one child. It is recorded that he painted a portrait of his daughter. He died at Mechelen. He must have enjoyed quite a high reputation as
Philip V, the King of Spain, is believed to have ordered a mirror frame representing the union of Spain and France from him. This work was ultimately not delivered to the King as the Southern Netherlands ultimately passed from Spanish to Austrian control as a result of the
War of the Spanish Succession, which ended with the
Peace of Utrecht. He died in Mechelen on 26 October 1719 and was buried in the
St. Rumbold's Cathedral. ==Work==