Alexander Bening (died 1519), also Sanders Bening, was an early 16th-century miniature painter of the Ghent-Bruges school and Netherlandish tradition. His date of birth is unknown.
Bening was part of a South Netherlandish family of illuminators. He married Kathelijn van der Goes (probably a sister or niece of the painter Hugo van der Goes). Bening had two sons: Simon Bening, who was trained in his father's craft, and Paul Bening, whose profession is unknown.[1]
No documented work is known by Bening. Records indicate in 1469 he became a member of the Guild of Saint Luke. Sanders and his family lived in Ghent, but in 1486 he also joined the Bruges Guild of St John and St Luke, whose membership embraced all those concerned with the production of books.[2]
His daughter Cornelia married Andrew Halyburton, Conservator of Scottish privileges in the Netherlands.[3] It has been suggested that Bening himself was related to a family of artists surnamed "Binning" working in Edinburgh later in the sixteenth century.[4][5]
References
edit- ^ "Bening Family of Artists". Retrieved 27 September 2012.
- ^ "Alexander Bening Brief Biography". Retrieved 27 September 2012.
- ^ Fleming, Alexander & Mason, Roger (Eds.) (2019), Scotland and the Flemish People, Birlinn, Edinburgh, p.62
- ^ David MacRoberts, 'Notes on Scoto-Flemish artistic contacts', Innes Review, 10:1 (1959), pp. 91–6
- ^ "Artistic Exchanges between Scotland and Flanders". Retrieved 7 February 2018.
External links
edit- Gerard David: purity of vision in an age of transition, an exhibition catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art (fully available online as PDF), which contains material on Bening (see index)
- Grimani Breviary: a Remarkable Artistic Collaboration between Simon Bening and Other Artists