Gil de Siloé

Gil de Siloé
Born Gil de Amberes?
c. 1440
Antwerp?
Died 1501
Burgos, Spain
Nationality Castilian, Spain
Known for Sculpture
Movement Isabelline Gothic
Patron(s) Isabella I of Castile

Gil de Siloé (Antwerp? 1440s – Burgos, 1501) was a Castilian sculptor of Flemish origin, who worked in Burgos in a late gothic or Isabelline style.

His style, which combines influences of the Germanic and Flemish gothic, and Mudéjar, is very meticulous endowed with great technical virtuosity.

He was the father of an important architect and sculptor, Diego de Siloe.

Works

In Miraflores Charterhouse there are several works by Gil de Siloé:

For Burgos Cathedral:

  • Altar piece of the chapel of Saint Anne (1486-1492).
  • Retable of Saint Anne in the Chapel of the Condestable (c.1498).

Other works:

  • Funeral monument for Don Juan de Padilla for the Monastery of Fresdeval, actually in the Museum of Burgos (c.1500).

.Enthroned Virgin and Christ Child in alabaster Cleveland Art Museum Cleveland Ohio

Attribution

Many attributions are debated by art historians if are by his hand, by members of his workshop or by followers. Among them the most outstanding are:

  • The façade of the San Gregorio College in Valladolid.
  • The doors between the transept and the cloister of Burgos Cathedral.

Sources

  • Ian Chilvers (1990). The Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-953294-0.
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