LluÃÂs Dalmau (also spelled Luis Dalmau; Valencia?, c. 1400 â Barcelona?, c. 1460) was a Spanish painter associated with the Hispano-Flemish style of the 15th century. He played a pivotal role in introducing Netherlandish realism into Catalan Gothic painting. He was active in Barcelona from 1428 to 1460 and served the king of Spain in an official capacity.
LluÃÂs Dalmau was probably born in Valencia around the beginning of the 15th century, although exact details of his birth and early life remain uncertain.
The earliest records of the artistic activity of LluÃÂs Dalmau date from 1428 and note his Valencian origin and that by then he already belonged to the âÂÂhousehold of the lord king,â Alfonso the Magnanimous, who sent him to the Kingdom of Castile in 1428.
In 1431, Dalmau received 100 gold florins to cover the expenses he would incur in traveling to Flanders, accompanied by the royal master of tapestries, who would facilitate contacts with Flemish artists.
DalmauâÂÂs stay in Flanders is estimated to have lasted close to five years, since the artist is mentioned again in July 1436, when he was paid wages and materials for the decoration of a tent made in Valencia by order of the king. It is also thought that there may have been another trip to Flanders between 1438 and 1443, the year the contract for the altarpiece of the Virgin of the Councillors was signed, a period for which there are no records of the painter.
After completing this work, he continued to reside in Barcelona, and on 15 September 1448 he was commissioned to produce the altarpiece of Saint Baldiri of Sant Boi de Llobregat.
Most of LluÃÂs DalmauâÂÂs works have been lost. Only two survive whose authorship is documented with certainty: the Altarpiece of the Virgin of the Councillors and the Altarpiece of Saint Baldiri. He is also attributed with the decoration of the vault of the tomb of Sança Ximenis de Cabrera in the Chapel of Saint Clare and Saint Catherine of the Barcelona Cathedral.
Among the lost works, documentary evidence records commissions for the king as well as religious works, including: