# Jean-Baptiste Brusselmans artist context and auction value notes

Canonical page: https://appraisily.com/artist/jean-baptiste-brusselmans/
Profile generated: 2026-05-23T12:01:08.575Z
Quality: high confidence, strong sources

## Artist identity

- Birth date: 1884-06-13
- Death date: 1953-01-09
- Nationality: Belgian
- Movements: Flemish Expressionism
- Common media: oil painting, lithography, watercolor, drawing (chalk, pencil, ink), mixed media

## About Jean-Baptiste Brusselmans

Jean-Baptiste Brusselmans (1884-1953) was a Belgian painter, lithographer, watercolorist, and graphic artist whose independent vision set him apart from his contemporaries. Born in Brussels and trained in painting between 1904 and 1907, he developed a highly personal style characterized by structured composition and bold color. Although critics often place him within Flemish Expressionism, Brusselmans himself refused affiliation with any organized movement, preferring to pursue his own formal language. During his lifetime he struggled to find recognition and had difficulty selling his work. Posthumously, however, he has come to be regarded as one of the significant Belgian painters of the twentieth century, appreciated for the disciplined originality of his landscapes and figurative compositions.

## Common works and media

Collectors and appraisers most frequently encounter Brusselmans' oil-on-canvas landscapes, harbor scenes, and figurative compositions, often rendered in his distinctive flattened perspective and muted palette. He also produced lithographs, watercolors, and drawings in chalk, pencil, and ink. Mixed-media works on paper appear occasionally. His subjects center on the Belgian countryside, coastal views, and domestic or village scenes executed with a geometrically structured approach that reflects his independent stance between Expressionism and broader European modernism.

## Market and appraisal context

Brusselmans' work appears at auction with moderate frequency, primarily in European modern and contemporary art sales. Oil paintings from his mature period (roughly the 1920s through the early 1950s) tend to attract the strongest collector interest. Works on paper, watercolors, and lithographs provide a more accessible entry point. Provenance documentation can be thinner than for artists who enjoyed sustained gallery representation, so collectors should verify attribution carefully. Condition, signature consistency (works are typically signed 'Jean Brusselmans'), subject matter, and date are the principal factors influencing appraised value.

## Appraisily data basis

Appraisily artist pages combine structured artist-identity research from museum, library-authority, and scholarly sources with auction records, sale dates, realized prices, and comparable lots when those records are available. For Jean-Baptiste Brusselmans, identity data is grounded in the RKD Netherlands Institute, Getty ULAN, VIAF, and Wikidata authority files.

## Sources

- RKD Netherlands Institute: https://rkd.nl/en/explore/artists/13612
- Getty Vocabulary Program: https://vocab.getty.edu/page/ulan/500028851
- VIAF: https://viaf.org/viaf/62890153/
- Wikidata: https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q2909779
- Library of Congress: https://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n82070238
- Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Brusselmans
