Master of the Legend of Saint Catherine

He was named after a painting with Scenes from the Legend of Saint Catherine, now kept in the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium.

[2] In the 19th century, his works, like many Early Netherlandish paintings, were attributed to Jan van Eyck or Hans Memling.

At the 1902 Exposition des primitifs flamands à Bruges, the Mass of Saint Gregory panels (now in the Metropolitan Museum) were attributed to an unknown follower of Rogier van der Weyden, placing the artist more in the Brussels' school of artists than the earlier attributions.

[1] Multiple works were first attributed to this artist by Max Jacob Friedländer.

No works by Pieter van der Weyden are known, even though he was clearly an important painter in Brussels in the late 15th century.

Scenes from the Legend of Saint Catherine , the painting that gave this master his Notname . Now in the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium
Triptych of the Miracles of Christ , workshop of the Master of the Legend of Saint Catherine, now in the National Gallery of Victoria