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"Sacrifice of Isaac"

Artist Pieter ThijsĀ  became a master in Antwerp's Guild of St Luke and from c. 1647 worked for Archduke Leopold William in Brussels and the House of Orange in The Hague. He executed allegorical and mythological compositions, was also active as a portrait painter and later in his career he concentrated mainly on religious compositions for Antwerp monasteries and numerous churches in smaller towns. Thijs was greatly influenced by the later work of van Dyck. This may be related to the fact that his early patrons were rulers whose taste was formed by van Dyck's refined courtly style. Other possible influences include the work of older painters such as Thomas Willeboirts Bosschaert (1614-54) and Gonzales Coques; both artists were among the earliest followers of van Dyck, and they were also Thijs's predecessors at the courts of Brussels and The Hague. After c. 1660 Thijs combined this courtly style with a somewhat theatrical decorum, which clearly shows the growing contemporary predilection for academic and classical compositions.