Confessional depicting the Holy Family taking shelter in the temple ruins, St Catherine's Church, Mechelen

Pieter Valckx[1] (1 March 1734, Mechelen - 3 May 1785, Mechelen) was a Flemish sculptor. He is mainly known for church furniture in the churches in Mechelen. He was one of the last representatives of the Flemish Baroque.[2]

Life

Valckx was the son of a painter and trained in Mechelen with the sculptors Theodoor Verhaegen and Jan Baptist Mooriaen. He then continued his studies at the Academy of Fine Arts in Antwerp. He also attended classes in the studio of Alexander Franciscus Schobbens. On his return to Mechelen in 1761 he became a master sculptor. In 1780 he became dean of the Guild of Saint Luke of Mechelen.[3]

His pupils included Jan Frans van Geel, who had a brilliant career, en Jan Baptist Turner.[3][4]

Organ case depicting the Multiplication of the loaves, Church of St John the Baptist and Evangelist, Mechelen

Work

The majority of Valckx's works consists of church furniture, which shows the influence of his teacher Theodoor Verhaegen in its naturalistic detail as well as of the school of Peter Paul Rubens.

He produced many pieces of church furnishings after designs by Verhaegen, such as the main altar (1768) in the Church of St John the Baptist and Evangelist in Mechelen and the pulpit (1774) of the St. Catherine Church in Mechelen.[2]

Selected works

Mechelen

Outside Mechelen

References

  1. ^ Variations on first name: Peeter, Petrus and Pierre and variation on family name: Valck
  2. ^ a b c Iris Kockelbergh. "Valckx, Pieter." Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press. Web. 17 October 2020
  3. ^ a b c Pieter Valckx Religious sculptor from Mechelen on Mechelen Mapt
  4. ^ Denis Coekelberghs, Les sculpteurs malinois en Europe (1780-1850), in La Tribune de l’Art, 10 April 2006
  5. ^ Pulpit in the St. Catherine Church in Brussels