Flemish family of artists and dealers. Jan de Momper I (fl 1512–16) was a painter in Bruges; his son Josse de Momper I (1516–59) was known as an artist and dealer who moved from Bruges to Antwerp, where his son Bartolomeus de Momper (1535–after 1597) inherited both occupations, as well as being an engraver. Bartholomeus’s sons (1) Josse de Momper II and Jan de Momper II were both landscape painters, but Josse the younger, an engraver and draughtsman as well, was the outstanding artist of the family. His art, which was popular and influential in his own time, belongs to the transitional period between late 16th-century Mannerism and the tendency towards greater realism that developed in the early 17th century. Although two of Josse the younger’s sons, Gaspard de Momper (fl 1627) and Philips de Momper I (fl 1622–34), were painters, little is known of their work, except that Philips was a staffage painter who executed the figures in some of his father’s paintings; he also spent some years in Rome, where he had travelled with Jan Breughel the younger. Jan de Momper the younger’s son ...