Melchior Boisserée
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Melchior Boisserée was a German art collector.


Life

Boiserée was born at Cologne in 1786. In the wake of the Roer (department), French occupation and the closure of many churches, he undertook, in conjunction with his brother, Sulpiz Boisserée, Sulpice Boisserée, and Johann Baptist Bertram, the formation of a collection of pictures by early German and Netherlandish painters, to which the three devoted twenty years' labour and the bulk of their fortunes. The most important work in their collection, bought in 1808, was the ''Adoration of the Magi'' part of the St Columba Altarpiece, which the brothers believed to be by Jan van Eyck although it is now attributed to Rogier van der Weyden. In 1819 they moved their collection from Heidelberg to Stuttgart, and in 1827 sold the pictures, with a few exceptions which are in the chapel of St. Maurice at Nuremberg, to the Ludwig I of Bavaria, King of Bavaria, for 120,000 thalers (£18,000); they are now in the Alte Pinakothek, Pinakothek at Munich. The collection was recorded in a series of 117 lithographs by the Danish printmaker Johann Nepomuk Strixner, published between 1821 and 1840 in 39 parts. Boisserée was the inventor of a new and simple method of painting on glass by means of the brush alone, and employed it for the reproduction of the best works in his collection, and of some Masterpiece, chefs-d'oeuvre of the Italian Renaissance painting, Italian school which are now at Akademisches Kunstmuseum, Bonn. He died at Bonn in 1851.


See also

* List of German painters


References


Sources

*


External links


Melchior Boisserée in the ''Dictionary of Art Historians''Strixner's lithographs after Boisserée's collection
19th-century German painters 19th-century German male artists German male painters German antiquarians German lithographers German art collectors 19th-century art collectors Artists from Cologne 1786 births 1851 deaths German male non-fiction writers {{Germany-painter-stub