Portrait of Jean Carondelet
Jan Gossaert·1525
Historical Context
Jan Gossaert painted this Portrait of Jean de Carondelet around 1517, depicting the chancellor of Flanders and one of the most powerful officials in the Habsburg Netherlands in a work that also exists as part of the famous Carondelet Diptych with the facing Madonna. Carondelet was an important humanist patron and ecclesiastical dignitary who had contact with Erasmus and the northern humanist circle, and Gossaert's portrait conveys both his official authority and his intellectual distinction. The portrait's combination of the official three-quarter pose with the devotional context—Carondelet shown in prayer before the Madonna—creates a complex image that asserted both his secular power and his personal piety. The work demonstrates Gossaert's mastery of the private devotional portrait at its most sophisticated.
Technical Analysis
Gossaert renders Carondelet with characteristic precision, capturing the dignitary's features with unflinching honesty while conveying his high status through rich ecclesiastical vestments. The smooth, luminous paint surface demonstrates Gossaert's exceptional technical command.

![Saint Jerome Penitent [left panel] by Jan Gossaert](https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:Redirect/file/Saint_Jerome_Penitent_A14668.jpg&width=600)
![Saint Jerome Penitent [right panel] by Jan Gossaert](https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:Redirect/file/Saint_Jerome_Penitent_A14672.jpg&width=600)



