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Corner Plates of the Tombstone of Gijsbert Willemsz Raet, with the Four Evangelists
anonymous, c. 1511
These four corner plates feature the symbols of the Four Evangelists: a winged lion (Mark), a winged ox (Luke), an eagle (John) and an angel (Matthew). The influence of printmaking – and specifically of Martin Schongauer – on other art forms is clear to see here. Slight differences notwithstanding, the maker was certainly inspired by either Schongauer’s engravings or copies thereof, or objects based on those prints.
- Artwork typeplaat, grafzerk
- Object numberBK-NM-32-2
- Dimensionsheight 24 cm x width 24.5 cm, thickness 0.5 cm
- Physical characteristicsbrass with vermilion and lampblack
Identification
Title(s)
- Corner Plates of the Tombstone of Gijsbert Willemsz Raet, with the Four Evangelists
- St Matthew, Corner Plate from the Gravestone of Gijsbert Willemsz Raet in Gouda
Object type
Object number
BK-NM-32-2
Description
Een van de vier messing hoekplaten afkomstig van een grafzerk van Gijsbert Willemsz. Raet te Gouda. De plaat heeft een omtrek, die uit vier accoladebogen is opgebouwd, met bladornamentjes op vier hoeken. Het veld wordt ingenomen door een van de vier Evangelistensymbolen: een geknielde engel met op de banderol in gotisch schrift: 'matheus.' Deze plaat bevond zich oorspronkelijk rechtsonder de middenplaat.
Inscriptions / marks
inscription, on the banderole, inscised: ‘matheus’
Part of catalogue
Creation
Creation
brass caster: anonymous, Low Countries
Dating
c. 1511
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Material and technique
Physical description
brass with vermilion and lampblack
Dimensions
- height 24 cm x width 24.5 cm
- thickness 0.5 cm
Explanatory note
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This work is about
Subject
Acquisition and rights
Acquisition
purchase 1873
Copyright
Provenance
Commissioned by or for Gijsbert Willemsz Raet (d. 1511), and placed on his grave in the Jeruzalemkapel, Gouda, c. 1511; transferred to the Heilige Geest Weeshuis, Gouda, 1586; acquired by David van der Kellen Jr, Amsterdam, March 1864; acquired with the Van der Kellen collection, February 1874{O. ter Kuile, _Koper en brons_ (_Catalogi van de verzameling kunstnijverheid van het Rijksmuseum van Amsterdam_, vol. 1), coll. cat. Amsterdam 1986, p. VIII.}
Documentation
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anonymous
St Matthew, Corner Plate from the Gravestone of Gijsbert Willemsz Raet (d. 1511)
Low Countries, c. 1511
Inscriptions
- inscription, on the banderole, inscised:matheus
Technical notes
Cast in a stone mould and engraved. The recessed areas of the plate’s front were polychromed with lampblack and vermillion, possibly originally supplemented with blue and white.
Alloy leaded brass alloy; copper with high impurities (Cu 69.45%; Zn 23.14%; Sn 0.93%; Pb 4.27%; Sb 0.82%; As 0.45%; Fe 0.26%; Ni 0.31%; Ag 0.05%; Au 0.13%)
Scientific examination and reports
- X-ray fluorescence spectrometry: A. Pappot, RMA, 2017
Condition
Traces of the original polychromy in lampblack and vermillion can still be discerned in the recessed areas of the front of the plates.
Provenance
Commissioned by or for Gijsbert Willemsz Raet (d. 1511), and placed on his grave in the Jeruzalemkapel, Gouda, c. 1511; transferred to the Heilige Geest Weeshuis, Gouda, 1586; acquired by David van der Kellen Jr, Amsterdam, March 1864; acquired with the Van der Kellen collection, February 18741O. ter Kuile, Koper en brons (Catalogi van de verzameling kunstnijverheid van het Rijksmuseum van Amsterdam, vol. 1), coll. cat. Amsterdam 1986, p. VIII.
Object number: BK-NM-32-2
Entry
Gijsbert Willemsz Raet, vicar of the St Andreas altar in the Sint-Janskerk in Gouda, died on 27 May 1511. Several decades before, circa 1479, Raet founded the Jeruzalemkapel in that same city as a token of thanks after safely returning from a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. In 1505, he donated the chapel to the Broeders des Gemenen Levens (Brethren of the Common Life). At his own request, Raet was buried in the chapel beneath a gravestone slab made of Namur or Tournai stone, inlaid with elaborately decorated brass plates. In 1586, the chapel was designated as the chaplain’s chamber, at which time the gravestone was moved to the adjacent Heilige Geest Weeshuis (Holy Spirit Orphanage). Having survived partly intact, the stone slab was moved back to the Jeruzalemkapel in 2010 (fig. a).2On loan term loan from the Museum Gouda, inv. no. 02147. The border inscription lining the gravestone’s perimeter states the name of the deceased and the date of his death.3O. ter Kuile, Koper en brons (Catalogi van de verzameling kunstnijverheid van het Rijksmuseum van Amsterdam, vol. 1), coll. cat. Amsterdam 1986, p. 40: Anno d(omi)ni xvc die / xxvii maiji obiit (rabi)lis d(omi)nus Ghijsbert (...) (fun)dator h(uius) capelle c(uius) a(n)i(m)a Req(ui)escat in pace. In the nineteenth century, the five brass plates were transferred to the Rijksmuseum.
The five brasses from Raet’s gravestone consist of a large central plate and four smaller ornamental corner plates. The central brass (BK-NM-32-1) has the form of an inverted triangle resting on its point, intersected by a gothic trefoil surmounted by crockets and rosettes. An inscription band lines the form’s perimeter, which encloses the scene of an angel holding two escutcheons while standing on an underground with stylized plants. The right-hand escutcheon shows on one side the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem with the Jerusalem cross above it, and adjacent to this, St Catherine’s wheel pierced by two swords. Depicted on the left-hand escutcheon is a chalice flanked by two palm branches. The Latin marginal inscription, written in Gothic minuscule, reads: In tenebris stra vi lectulum meum Et rursum post tenebras spero lucem (In darkness I have made my bed and after darkness I expect again light).4Job 17:12-13. The four ornamental corner brasses are square in form and positioned standing on a vortex, with the sides articulated as accolades from which small foliate ornamentation emerges. Each corner plate contains a symbol of one of the four evangelists, holding a banderole bearing the saint’s name: the lion of St Mark (marcs) (upper left, BK-NM-32-3, the bull of St Luke (lucas) (upper right, BK-NM-32-5), the eagle of St John (iohes) (lower left, BK-NM-32-4), and the kneeling angel of St Matthew (matheus) (lower right, shown here).
All five brasses were originally furnished with a polychromy in vermilion and lampblack, possibly supplemented with blue and white,5These two colours are described by D. van der Kellen (Le Moyen-âge et la renaissance dans les Pays-Bas, The Hague 1865-78), no trace thereof can be discerned today. thus achieving a strong colouristic effect in combination with the yellowish tint of the polished brass and the gravestone’s dark-grey tone. The crosshatching in the deeper-lying sections of the plates served to facilitate the paint’s adhesion to the brass underground.
This kind of metal inlay work was once a specialty of brass founders in the Southern Netherlands, specifically in the cities of Bruges, Ghent and Mechelen.6J.W. Steyaert et al., Late Gothic Sculpture: The Burgundian Netherlands, exh. cat. Ghent (Museum of Fine Arts) 1994, nos. 45, 46, 48. While Ter Kuile presumed that Raet’s gravestone was made in the Northern Netherlands, possibly even from Gouda, this is a far from certain conclusion. The similarity of the standing angel to figures on a Bruges gravestone dating from the 1460s, however, suggests Raet more likely turned to a specialist from Flanders for the making of his gravestone.7Cf. J.W. Steyaert et al., Late Gothic Sculpture: The Burgundian Netherlands, exh. cat. Ghent (Museum of Fine Arts) 1994, pp. 207 (figs. 45, 45a), 208, 209.
Frits Scholten, 2024
Literature
D. van der Kellen, Le Moyen-âge et la renaissance dans les Pays-Bas, The Hague 1865-78, nos. 38, 38a; C.J. de Lange van Wijngaerden, Geschiedenis en beschrijving der stad van der Goude, vol. 3, Gouda 1879, pp. 143-44; A. Pit, Catalogus van de beeldhouwwerken in het Nederlandsch Museum voor geschiedenis en kunst te Amsterdam, coll. cat. Amsterdam 1915, no. 216; J. Belonje and F.A. Greenhill, ‘Some Brasses in Germany and the Low Countries’, Transactions of the Monumental Brass Society 10 (1968), part 6, pp. 445-49; E.G.G. Bos, Vijf eeuwen koper en brons (Rijksmuseum, Facetten der Verzameling 13), Amsterdam 1973, fig. 39; O. ter Kuile, Koper en brons (Catalogi van de verzameling kunstnijverheid van het Rijksmuseum van Amsterdam, vol. 1), coll. cat. Amsterdam 1986, no. 40
Citation
F. Scholten, 2024, 'anonymous, St Matthew, Corner Plate from the Gravestone of Gijsbert Willemsz Raet (d. 1511), Low Countries, c. 1511', in F. Scholten and Bieke van der Mark (eds.), European Sculpture in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: https://data.rijksmuseum.nl/20082661
(accessed 22 mei 2026 22:30:57 UTC+0).Figures
Footnotes
- 1O. ter Kuile, Koper en brons (Catalogi van de verzameling kunstnijverheid van het Rijksmuseum van Amsterdam, vol. 1), coll. cat. Amsterdam 1986, p. VIII.
- 2On loan term loan from the Museum Gouda, inv. no. 02147.
- 3O. ter Kuile, Koper en brons (Catalogi van de verzameling kunstnijverheid van het Rijksmuseum van Amsterdam, vol. 1), coll. cat. Amsterdam 1986, p. 40: Anno d(omi)ni xvc die / xxvii maiji obiit (rabi)lis d(omi)nus Ghijsbert (...) (fun)dator h(uius) capelle c(uius) a(n)i(m)a Req(ui)escat in pace.
- 4Job 17:12-13.
- 5These two colours are described by D. van der Kellen (Le Moyen-âge et la renaissance dans les Pays-Bas, The Hague 1865-78), no trace thereof can be discerned today.
- 6J.W. Steyaert et al., Late Gothic Sculpture: The Burgundian Netherlands, exh. cat. Ghent (Museum of Fine Arts) 1994, nos. 45, 46, 48.
- 7Cf. J.W. Steyaert et al., Late Gothic Sculpture: The Burgundian Netherlands, exh. cat. Ghent (Museum of Fine Arts) 1994, pp. 207 (figs. 45, 45a), 208, 209.




