Willem Thibaut, Tybaut, or Tibout (1524–1597), was a Dutch Golden Age painter.
According to the RKD, Thibaut lived and worked in Haarlem, but made the cartoons for the two stained-glass windows in Sint Janskerk in 1570.
According to Arnold Houbraken, who never understood why Karel van Mander never included glass painters in his Schilderboeck, Thibaut was well-known enough to be mentioned in Samuel Ampzing’s praise of Haarlem bearing in mind the words How masterly he could write on glass!.
Thibaut was moreover the inventor of the Counts of Holland print series that was well along reprinted by Philip Galle and Michiel Vosmeer (1578–1616) in 1578 in Antwerp. This series of prints was published to accompany a reprint of Melis Stoke’s Hollandse Jaar-Boeken of Rijm-Kronijk in 1699 by Cornelis van Alkemade. The adding to the title; Met de Afbeeldingen van alle de HOLLANDSE GRAVEN, Geschetst naar de aaloude schilderijen der Karmeliten te Haarlem meant that the prints were used based upon the frescoes found after the Siege of Haarlem in the Carmelite monastery in Haarlem. These frescoes were copied by Thibaut and used to make a stained glass series in Leiden that are now in the possession of the Stedelijk Museum De Lakenhal. The frescoes were external after the paintings hanging beyond them gone the similar subjects were removed to the Haarlem city hall.
According to Dirck Volckertszoon Coornhert’s biographer, Thibaut was links with Maarten van Heemskerck, and meant prints for Coornhert. These engravings were produced in 1556-1557 and published by Hieronymus Cock, and all had to pull off with the foolishness of man.
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