The first mention of Pierre Spicre is in 1470, to judge the finished tomb of John the Fearless and Margaret of Bavaria in Champmol.
He painted a retable for the Lausanne Cathedral in 1473, and 21 modellos for the Notre Dame Church in Beaune in 1474-1475.
These works are presumed lost, just like the modello he made for a tapestry of Saint Bernard.
[1] A Mass of Saint Gregory in the Louvre has also been attributed tentatively to Spicre.
Whether a series of tapestries in the Notre Dame in Beaune is based on his lost modellos or not is disputed.