Gillis van den Vliete
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Gillis van den Vliete known in Italy as Egìdio della Riviera[1][2] (Mechelen, c. 1535 – buried on 4 September 1602 in Rome)[3] was a Flemish sculptor, restorer of ancient sculptures and antique dealer. His active career was spent in Italy, mostly in Rome. He produced both religious and secular sculpture including garden ornaments and tomb monuments. On some large projects he collaborated with other sculptors such as Nicolaes Mostaert, a Flemish sculptor active in Italy at the same time. His works are executed in the Northern Renaissance style which he had been trained in, in his native Flanders, but also intimate the advent of Baroque sculpture.[2][4]
The biographical details about van den Vliete are scarce. It is believed that he was born in Mechelen as in a contract signed in Rome in 1597 he is referred to as 'Egidio della Riviera Mechinense'.[5] Nothing is known about his training. He is first recorded in 1567 when he is part of a group of Flemish artists working in Rome.[2]

He was a restorer of antique sculptures. Like many other Flemish sculptors in Italy, he also traded in antique statues.[6] He was highly regarded and received various commissions. He made secular commissions such as the Fontana Della Madre Natura (Fountain of Mother Nature} made in 1568 for the garden of the Villa d'Este, a 16th-century villa in Tivoli, near Rome. He also executed various large-scale commissions in Roman churches. He created most of his known works in the Santa Maria dell'Anima in Rome. This shows that he was able to establish a long-term relationship with some of the leading figures at this Roman church.[7] Some of these works were created in collaboration with Nicolas Mostaert with whom he may have shared a workshop.

He married and had various children in the period from 1574 to 1597. His son Pieter van den Vliete, known as Pietro della Riviera, was born in Rome likely in 1583. Pietro was also active as a sculptor and was the heir of his father.[8] Gillis van den Vliete was admitted on 14 June 1579 as a member of the Pontificia Insigne Accademia di Belle Arti e Letteratura dei Virtuosi al Pantheon, a pontifical academy in Rome established for the purpose of studying, cultivating and perfecting the fine arts.[3] He owed this recognition to the creation of the funerary monument of Duke Karl Friedrich of Jülich-Cleves-Berg in the Santa Maria dell'Anima.[9] He was also a member of the Università dei Marmorari, Rome's sculptors' guild.[10] Van den Vliete was active as an appraiser of the sculptural works of other sculptors. An example is the case of the work on the horses at Monte Cavallo executed from 1589 to 1590 by Flaminio Vacca, Pietro Paolo Olivieri and Lodovico Sormanno. He and his colleague Giovanni Battista di Bianchi provided an estimate in the amount of 2250 scudi for the work done. The papal office did not accept the estimate and reduced the amount to 1800 scudi.[11]
In 1597, Gillis entered into a contract with the Flemish architect and painter Wenceslas Cobergher for the decoration of a chapel dedicated to the Holy Spirit in the Santa Maria in Vallicella, where the founder of this chapel, Didacodel Campo, the Pope's physician, had recently been buried. In the contract, he is called 'Egidio della Riviera Mechinense' (of Mechelen). He was assisted in this commission by his son Pietro. Pietro was still living in 1623, according to a contract he made that year for a house in the Porta Pia.[12]
He died in Rome where he was buried on 4 September 1602 in San Lorenzo in Lucina.[3]

