Mathis Gothart

E655434

Mathis Gothart, better known as Matthias Grünewald, was a German Renaissance painter renowned for his emotionally intense religious works, especially the Isenheim Altarpiece.

All labels observed (2)

Label Occurrences
Mathis Gothart canonical 1
Mathis Gothart-Neithart 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf German Renaissance painter
human
painter
activeYears early 16th century
late 15th century
alsoKnownAs Mathis Gothart Nithart NERFINISHED
Matthias Grünewald NERFINISHED
birthPlace Franconia NERFINISHED
Holy Roman Empire NERFINISHED
Würzburg NERFINISHED
contemporaryOf Albrecht Dürer NERFINISHED
Hans Holbein the Younger NERFINISHED
countryOfCitizenship Holy Roman Empire
dateOfBirth circa 1470
dateOfDeath 31 August 1528
deathPlace Electorate of Mainz NERFINISHED
Halle NERFINISHED
Holy Roman Empire NERFINISHED
employer Albrecht of Brandenburg NERFINISHED
Archbishopric of Mainz NERFINISHED
ethnicGroup German
fieldOfWork painting
genre religious art
influenced 20th-century religious painters
German Expressionism NERFINISHED
influencedBy Late Gothic art NERFINISHED
Netherlandish painting NERFINISHED
knownFor dramatic use of color and light
emotionally intense religious imagery
movement German Renaissance
Northern Renaissance NERFINISHED
name Mathis Gothart NERFINISHED
notableWork Isenheim Altarpiece NERFINISHED
Stuppach Madonna NERFINISHED
Tauberbischofsheim Altarpiece NERFINISHED
The Mocking of Christ NERFINISHED
The Small Crucifixion NERFINISHED
The Temptation of St. Anthony NERFINISHED
occupation draftsman
painter
religion Roman Catholicism
style expressive realism
workLocation Aschaffenburg NERFINISHED
Frankfurt am Main NERFINISHED
Isenheim NERFINISHED
Mainz NERFINISHED

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Matthias Grünewald alternativeName Mathis Gothart
Matthias Grünewald alternativeName Mathis Gothart
this entity surface form: Mathis Gothart-Neithart