Flemish painter, illustrator, and architect (1380 –1411)
Jacques Coene (active late 1380s – 1411) was a Flemish painter, illustrator, and architect. He worked in Belgium, France, and Italy. In 1399, he worked in the building of Milan Cathedral.[1] He apparently had commissions from John, Duke of Berry and Philip the Bold.[2]
Art historians sometimes attribute the Book of Hours created by the Boucicaut Master to him, however, this is no longer considered correct based on historical evidence.[3]
Bibliography
Coene, Jacques; van den Gheyn, J (1911). Deux Livres d'heures <nos 10767 et 11051 de la Bibliothèque Royale de Belgique> attribués à l'enlumineur Jacques Coene [Two Books of hours <numbers 10767 and 11051 and the Royal Library of Belgium has attributed to the illuminator> Jacques Coene] (in French). Bruxelles: Vromant. OCLC63258290.
Durrieu, Paul (1906). Jacques Coene, peintre de Bruges, établi à Paris sous le règne de Charles VI, 1398-1404. [By Count Paul Durrieu. With plates.] [Jacques Coene, painter of Bruges, established in Paris under the reign of Charles VI, 1398-1404] (in French). Association pour la Publication des Monuments de l'Art Flamand (BRUGES). Bruxelles: Verbeke. OCLC25716463.
^"Jacques Coene nell'Enciclopedia Treccani" [Jacques Coene Encyclopedia Trecento]. Treccani, il portale del sapere (in Italian). Rome, Italy: Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana. Retrieved 16 February 2012.