Elisabeth Scepens (also Elizabeth Scepens; fl. 1476) was a Flemish bookmaker and artist.
Elisabeth Scepens lived in Bruges, Flanders, in the late 15th century.[1] Alongside Adrien Raet,[2] she is one of two pupils known to have studied under the illuminatorWillem Vrelant.[3] Vrelant taught manuscript illustration and book production in Bruges, and archives of the studio list Scepens as one of his students in 1476.[4] Following his death in 1481, his widow inherited his workshop. Together with Scepens, Madame Vrelant ran the prolific studio, which produced portrait miniatures, calligraphy and capital letter decoration for manuscripts.[1]
In 1476, Scepens gained membership in the St. John the Evangelist Guild for scribes, illuminators and bookbinders. Her membership was renewed annually until 1489.[1] While it is possible that works attributed to Vrelant or his followers were actually by Scepens, no works of hers are known.[5] Scepens was part of the Northern Renaissance, and along with Margaret van Eyck, is one of the few known 15th-century Flemish women artists.[4]
Anderson, Bonnie S.; Zinsser, Judith P. (2000). A History of Their Own: Women in Europe from Prehistory to the Present. Vol. 1 (Rev. ed.). New York; NY: Oxford Univ. Press. ISBN0-19-512838-9.