Sculpture in Brussels has been created from the Middle Ages to the present day. The city has been an uninterrupted centre of autonomous training in the art of sculpture and has produced a long continuity of sculptors who were born and trained in Brussels or who came there to train. This style or school is sometimes referred to as the Brussels school of sculpture (; ).
Brussels' sculpture began to shine in the second half of the 14th century with Claus Sluter's arrival in the city and the construction of the Town Hall. It continued without interruption and reached its momentum during 15th and 16th centuries. Until the end of the Ancien Régime, sculptors in Brussels were members of the Quatre Couronnés Guild of the Nation of St Nicholas and then the Royal Academy of Fine Arts.
Brussels' sculpture began to assert itself in the second half of the 14th century with the arrival of the Dutch sculptor Claus Sluter, who was probably trained in the city, and who lived there from 1380 to 1385, before settling in Dijon, France. The art reached its momentum during the 15th and 16th centuries thanks to uninterrupted corporate training.
Around 1500, the most notable sculptors of altarpieces were the Borreman(s) (notably Jan Borreman the Elder and the Younger, and Passchier Borreman). Among the sculptors who benefited most from the cultural policy of the Archdukes Albert VII and Isabella were the Antwerp-born Robrecht Colyns de Nole and the Brussels-born (best known for his Manneken Pis).
Until the end of the Ancien Régime, the training of sculptors in Brussels took place mainly within the framework of the Quatre Couronnés Guild of the Nation of St Nicholas, and was later taken up by the Royal Academy of Fine Arts. Brussels, alongside Mechelen and Antwerp, played a dynamic role in the field of sculpture in the former Southern Netherlands. The archives bear witness to the existence of numerous active workshops training apprentices. The sculptors of Leuven were also influenced by those of Brussels.
Among the sculptors born in Brussels or who were active there, one can mention: Jan Borreman (fl. 1479âÂÂ1520), (1570?âÂÂ1641?), François Duquesnoy (1597âÂÂ1643), Jerôme Duquesnoy (II) (baptised 1602âÂÂ1654), Jan van Delen (1635/1636âÂÂ1703), Jan Cosijn (1646âÂÂ1708), (c. 1660âÂÂ1715), (1650âÂÂ1717), Peter van Dievoet (1661âÂÂ1729), (1675âÂÂ1739), Pierre-Denis Plumier (1688âÂÂ1721), (1693âÂÂ1756), François Lejeune (1721âÂÂ1790), Jean-Baptiste Fleuriot-Lescot (1761âÂÂ1794, guillotined), and Gilles-Lambert Godecharle (1750âÂÂ1835).