Van der Stockt's work was heavily influenced by
Rogier van der Weyden, with whom he may have collaborated. He would often reproduce motifs from paintings by Van der Weyden with only minor alterations, as is evidenced by
Kneeling Donor with Saint John the Baptist, now in the collection of the
Allen Memorial Art Museum, in which the figure of the saint closely resembles that in Van der Weyden's
Medici Madonna. His
Pietà is likewise modelled on van der Weyden's
Pietà. Although he was primarily a painter, Van der Stockt also completed
cartoons for
embroideries and
tapestries and designs for
woodcuts. None of Van der Stockt's works are documented; rather, they have been attributed to him based on their stylistic relationship to the
Redemption triptych, now in the collection of the
Museo del Prado in Madrid. The
Redemption triptych itself was not attributed to Van der Stockt until the 1920s. ==Gallery==