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Antoon Faydherbe

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Antoine Faydherbe
Born
Died8 October 1653
NationalityMechelaar
Educationapprentice to Filip Kerael
Known forsculpture
MovementBaroque
SpouseCharlotte van Casteele

Antoon Faydherbe or Antoine Fayd'herbe (died 1653) was a sculptor, who lived and worked in Mechelen, in the Southern Netherlands.

Life

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He was apprenticed to Filip Kerael in Mechelen's Guild of Saint Luke in 1598 and was awarded the freedom of the craft on 11 July 1605.

He sold a Madonna, two angels, a St Elizabeth and a St Augustine (all polychromed by his brother Hendrik Faydherbe) to the hospital in Hulst, and a statue of Our Lady of Scherpenheuvel to the church of St John the Baptist in Mechelen.[1] The city accounts show him carrying out minor works in 1634–1635 for the formal reception of the new governor general, the Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand of Austria.

His sister, Maria Faydherbe, was also a sculptor, as was his nephew, Lucas Faydherbe.

References

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  1. ^ Emmanuel Neeffs, "Fayd'herbe (Antoine)", Biographie Nationale de Belgique, vol. 6 (Brussels, 1878), 918–919.