'Garcia Fernandes' (d. c.
1565) was a
Portuguese Renaissance painter. Like many of painters of the time, Garcia Fernandes was a pupil in the
Lisbon workshop of
Jorge Afonso, who was
King Manuel's royal painter.
In the 1530s he worked in
Coimbra for the
Santa Clara Convent and the
Santa Cruz Monastery. Between 1533 and 1534, together with
Cristóvão de Figueiredo and
Gregório Lopes, he was responsible for the three painted altarpieces of the
Monastery of Ferreirim, near
Lamego. Later, he painted panels for the transept of the
Church of St Francis in
Évora.
In
Lisbon, he was responsible for the altarpiece of the Trindade Convent and the panel for the St Bartholomew Chapel of
Lisbon Cathedral (c. 1537), as well as the main altarpiece of the
São Roque Church (1541), now in the ''Museum of São Roque''. He even painted altarpieces commissioned for the cathedral of
Old Goa, in
Portuguese India, then a part of the
Portuguese Empire.
Garcia Fernandes married in 1518 and had at least nine children. His paintings can be seen in several churches and monasteries around Portugal, as well as in the
National Museum of Ancient Art (Lisbon) and the
Machado de Castro Museum (Coimbra).
References
★
Portuguese Renaissance painting (by Maria José Palla).
External links
★
Paintings by Garcia Fernandes (Six Centuries of Portuguese Painting website).