The
notname was given as five or six anonymous drawings attributed to the master were collected in six albums of drawings that were formerly in the collection of
John Perceval, 1st Earl of Egmont who had acquired them at the beginning of the 18th century. Since 1957 the albums are in the possession of the
Yale University Art Gallery in New Haven in the United States. The works show Italian and Nordic influences. This seems to indicate an initial training in the Southern Netherlands and a trip to southern Europe, as the works show knowledge of Venetian and Roman art as well as the works of Albrecht Dürer. The artist may also have had links with Cologne as the paper on which one of the drawings is produced bears a watermark that was in use in Cologne at the time. In a print of c. 1600 engraved by
Crispijn van de Passe, who was active in Cologne, after a drawing attributed to the master, the (abbreviated) name of the inventor is 'Quiten d M'. This may be a reference to the
Flemish Renaissance painter
Quentin Metsys the Younger who was active in Germany. It has, however, not been possible to conclusively identify the artist behind this monogram. This hypothesis was definitively rejected after the discovery of an autograph drawing by Dirck Hendricksz Centen (auctioned at Sotheby's in London on 15 July 2012 as lot number 14), because that drawing was stylistically very different from the drawing styles of the drawings attributed to the master. On the basis of stylistic comparison,
Anthonie Blocklandt van Montfoort, Claudius Cock,
Frans Francken the Elder, Jacob de Gheyn I,
Hendrick Goltzius,
Hans von Aachen,
Giovanni Antonio da Pordenone,
Giulio Romano,
Giovanni della Rovere,
Domenico Puligo,
Tintoretto a Northern follower of
Francesco Salviati and
Giovanni Battista Naldini and even Rubens have previously been proposed as possible creators of some of the drawings attributed to the Master. The broad range of attributions reflects the eclectic style of the artist. ==Work==