''Oil on wood, 64 × 45,5 cm
National Gallery, LondonMatsys' works include
A Portrait of an Elderly Man (1513),
Christ presented to the People (1518–1520) (Prado), and
A Grotesque Old Woman (or
The Ugly Duchess), which is perhaps the best-known of his works. It served as a basis for
John Tenniel's depiction of the Duchess in ''
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland''. It is likely a depiction of a real person with
Paget's disease, though it is sometimes said to be a metaphorical portrait of the
Margaret, Countess of Tyrol, who was known as
Maultasch, which, though literally translated "satchel mouth", was used to mean "ugly woman" or "whore" (because of her marital scandals). His two large triptych altarpieces
The Holy Kinship or
Saint Anne Altarpiece (1507–1509) and
The Entombment of the Lord (1508–1511) are also highly celebrated. Commissioned for the Church of Saint Peter in Leuven, they reflect strong religious feeling and precise detailing characteristic to the majority of his works. Matsys also painted part of the altarpiece of the
Convento da Madre de Deus, in
Lisbon. The altar is a primitive invocation of the
Seven Sorrows of Mary, with boards still evocative of
"Our Lady of Sorrows",
"Jesus among the Doctors",
"on the path to Calvary",
"Calvary",
"Lamentation" (all at the
Museu Nacional de Arte Antiga) and
"Flight into Egypt" (
Worcester Art Museum). Since the convent was founded by D. Leonor, Queen Dowager of King John II of Portugal and sister of King Manuel of Portugal, in 1509, it appeared that the order of this set has been performed once, with some authors (
Firedlander) pointing as the date of making the frames years prior to 1511. His
Christ as the Man of Sorrows is in the
J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles. Quentin's son,
Jan Matsys, inherited the art but did not seek to expand upon his father's legacy. The earliest of his works, a
St Jerome dated 1537, in the gallery of Vienna, as well as the latest, a
Healing of Tobias of 1564, in the museum of Antwerp, are evidence of his tendency to substitute imitation for originality. Another son,
Cornelis Matsys, was also a painter. Jan's son,
Quentin Metsys the Younger, was an
artist of the Tudor court, and painted the
Sieve Portrait of
Elizabeth I of England. Near the front of the Cathedral of Our Lady in Antwerp is a wrought-iron well, known as the "Matsys Well", which according to tradition was made by the painter-to-be. Matsys was a cult figure during the 17th century in Antwerp in addition to being one of the founders of the local school of painting (which climaxed with the career of
Peter Paul Rubens). A penny serial by the British author
Pierce Egan the Younger entitled
Quintin Matsys was published in 1839. , 245-248 == See also ==