Spanish School, 17Th Century

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Spanish School, 17Th Century The Old Blackhorse, Blackhorse Road, Skeyton, Norwich, Norfolk, NR10 5DJ, England www.riley-smith.com Mobile: + 44 (0)7771 552509 [email protected] Hans Bol (Mechelen 1534-1593 Amsterdam) The Crucifixion Signed and dated in brush [centre] ‘H Bol/ 1573’ and inscribed in the left corner ‘H.A.S. Bol/ 1573’, inscribed on the verso in pen and brown ink ‘Hans Bohl’ and numbered ‘1936’ Pen and brown ink and brown wash and two shades of grey wash heightened with white, incised for transfer on laid paper 273 x 198 mm. (10¾ x 7¾ in.) Provenance: Alister Mathews, Poole, catalogue 65 (autumn 1964), no.148; Dr J.A. van Dongen; Paul Russell, The Netherlands; Bob Haboldt & Co., New York and Paris, 1989; Jacobus A. Klaver, his mark (not in Lugt); his sale, Amsterdam, Sotheby’s 10 May 1994, lot 29; Private European collection till now. Exhibited: Amsterdam, Museum Willet-Holthuysen, Schilderijn, tekeningen en beeldhouwwerken 16e-20e eeuw uit de verzameling van Dr J.A. van Dongen, 1968, no.29. Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum, Tekeningen van Oude Meesters, De Verzameling Jacobus A. Klaver, 1993, cat. no.3. Literature: T.Gerszi, Netherlandish Drawings in the Budapest Museum: Sixteenth Century Drawings, Amsterdam/ New York, 1971, vol.I, under no.17. D.J. Johnson, Old Master Drawings from the Budapest Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design, Providence, Rhode Island, 1983, p.212, under no.74, note 6. K.G. Boon, The Netherlandish and German Drawings of the XVth and XVIth Centuries of the Frits Lugt Collection, Paris, 1992, vol. I, p.41, under no.22, p.42 notes 13 and 15, vol. II, fig.39b. Bob. P. Haboldt & Co, New York, Old Master Paintings and Drawings, the first five years, 1989, catalogue number 15. Stefan Hautekeete, ‘Italianate and vernacular trends in the work of Hans Bol’, Brepols, forthcoming publication.1 Our drawing, plus the two side ‘panel’ drawings in the Rhode Island School of Design2, Providence and The Frits Lugt Collection3, Paris, are for a painting in a private German Collection4 [see Figures 1]. The differences between the three drawings and the painting are quite marked. In our drawing of The Crucifixion the top of the composition is not rounded like an arch, as in the painted version in Germany. However the key elements are the same, the positioning of the three crosses, the two lances (though in the painting a third has been introduced), and the overall 1 The Old Blackhorse, Blackhorse Road, Skeyton, Norwich, Norfolk, NR10 5DJ, England www.riley-smith.com Mobile: + 44 (0)7771 552509 [email protected] location of the figures. The location of the Three Maries at the foot of the Cross are similar, however the internal positioning of the figures is quite different. This is certainly to be expected, especially due to the fact that the picture in Germany has been dated by Franz to twenty years later, the year of Bol’s death, 1593. There are other changes between the drawing and the painting, for example the ladder in the drawing has been removed from the painting, and there are changes to the fighting figures in the background, and the townscape has been flattened in the painting, whilst in the drawing the town is on a hillside.5 The changes between our drawing of The Crucifixion and the painting are also repeated in the other drawings for this triptych. In the drawing of the Adoration of the Shepherds in the Frits Lugt Collection in Paris the changes between the drawing and the painting are significant. The whole composition in the painting has been spread out horizontally. This is not a surprise since the drawing only measures 98 mm in width. In an interesting note aside the two drawings in Paris and Providence measure 98 mm each in width, whilst our drawing is 198 mm in width. Therefore it seems likely to assume that all these three drawings came from the same batch of paper, and the Paris and Providence sheets were just cut in two. Moreover the height of all three drawings are exact, the Paris and Providence sheets are 273 mm in height, and our drawing is 273 mm in height. Back to the drawing in Providence and the painting in Germany, the wooden structure in the drawing has been removed and the whole expanded and extended. The figure group has also been expanded, however the key elements are the same and the shepherd on left of the drawing holding his hat is repeated in almost the same position in the painting. In the drawing of The Resurrection in Providence and the painting in the German private collection the changes are similar to the ones we have seen between the Paris drawing and the painting in Germany. In regards to The Resurrection the composition in the painting have been expanded horizontally to include a larger rocky landscape and more soldiers. Again the key elements in the composition of the drawing have been kept. The sleeping guard on the lower left, the figure holding a lance, also on the left, and the risen Christ in the sky. The composition of our drawing was one that Bol was keen on since we know of three other versions in gouache. One in the Rhode Island School of Design, Providence6, a second in the Szépmüvészeti Museum, Budapest7, and the third in a private collection in England8. Emily Peters has recently pointed out that our drawing probably served as a preparatory drawing for the gouache in Providence. 9 Hans Bol, born ‘of good descent’, two paternal uncles being painters, was trained in the Malines tradition of ‘water- verwers’ (water-painter) or ‘doekschilders’ (canvas painters). These pictures, painted with watercolour or tempera on canvas, were used as wall decorations and formed a more affordable alternative to the very expensive tapestries.1 Little of this mass production remains. Despite his success in this typical Mechelen specialty, frustrated because his designs were widely copied and even sold under his name, Bol abandoned it and chose to work with very small sizes, more difficult to be copied by others, devoting himself to drawings minutely finished in colours on parchment. In addition to these miniature-like gouaches, Bol is known for his extensive graphic oeuvre of both uncoloured drawings and prints. His earliest known drawing, signed and dated 1557, is in the collection of Museum 2 The Old Blackhorse, Blackhorse Road, Skeyton, Norwich, Norfolk, NR10 5DJ, England www.riley-smith.com Mobile: + 44 (0)7771 552509 [email protected] Boijmans Van Beuningen (inv. no. N 35). According to his compatriot, fellow artist and biographer Karel van Mander (Schilderboeck, 1604), Bol was apprenticed for two years to an ordinary local canvas painter when he was 14 years old.2 After that he travelled in Germany, first staying in Heidelberg for two years, eventually returning to his native city of Malines in 1560. There he was enrolled in the painters guild in 1560 or 1561. Bol settled in Antwerp in 1572 after Malines had been taken and plundered by Spanish troops trying to regain control in the low countries after the waves of revolt and iconoclasm. He joined the Antwerp guild of St Luke in 1574, together with his younger brother Jacob (or Jacques) and received citizenship a year later. When the city on the river Schelde also came under siege, surrendering the year after, he was one of the many artists from the Southern Netherlands who fled the Spanish oppression and sought their fortune in the free province of Holland. In 1584 Bol travelled to the North, following his brother Jacob, who went to Dordrecht in 1578. By way of Bergen op Zoom (where he had been before, around 1579-80), Dordrecht and Delft, he finally arrived in Amsterdam around 1588, and died there in 1593. Bol became an important link between the Flemish landscape tradition and that of the Northern Netherlands. His drawings are a witness to the prominent role he played in the development of landscape art in the Netherlands. His landscapes are often populated by human figures, in scenes from the bible or from everyday life, often combined. Realistically observed details mingle with elements drawn from the imagination. In this approach to landscape Bol was influenced by the work of his contemporary Pieter Bruegel the Elder. With this great master he also shared his preference for depicting the seasons and the months of the year. Bruegel had revived this medieval tradition with his monumental series of the months, painted in 1565. In the following years he made designs for a series of prints of the Four Seasons. When Bruegel died 1569, only Spring and Summer had been completed. That Bol was approached by the famous print publisher Hieronymus Cock to make designs for Autumn and Winter, demonstrates the high esteem the artist already enjoyed by 1570. In effect, through this commission the young Bol became the old Bruegel’s successor. In the following years Bol designed several more series of the Four Seasons with the activities characteristic of each. None of these is as exhaustive as the series of the Twelve Months in Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen (inv. no. MB 2005/T 2), which was engraved by Adriaen Collaert to the order of the print publisher Hans van Luyck, and thus became widely known and exerted great influence on contemporary artists. In 1582 Hans Bol and his workshop illuminated the Book of Hours of the Duke of Alençon, who was proclaimed Duke of Brabant in that year. Among his pupils recorded in 1572, 1575 and 1580 were his stepson Frans Boels and Jacques Savery (c.
Recommended publications
  • On Brabant Rubbish, Economic Competition, Artistic Rivalry, And
    UvA-DARE (Digital Academic Repository) On Brabant rubbish, economic competition, artistic rivalry and the growth of the market for paintings in the first decades of the seventeenth century Sluijter, E.J. Publication date 2009 Document Version Final published version Published in Journal of Historians of Netherlandish Art Link to publication Citation for published version (APA): Sluijter, E. J. (2009). On Brabant rubbish, economic competition, artistic rivalry and the growth of the market for paintings in the first decades of the seventeenth century. Journal of Historians of Netherlandish Art, 1(2). http://jhna.org/index.php/volume-1-issue-2/72- vol1issue2/109-on-brabant-rubbish-economic-competition-artistic-rivalry-and-the-growth-of- the-market-for-paintings-in-the-first-decades-of-the-seventeenth-century General rights It is not permitted to download or to forward/distribute the text or part of it without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), other than for strictly personal, individual use, unless the work is under an open content license (like Creative Commons). Disclaimer/Complaints regulations If you believe that digital publication of certain material infringes any of your rights or (privacy) interests, please let the Library know, stating your reasons. In case of a legitimate complaint, the Library will make the material inaccessible and/or remove it from the website. Please Ask the Library: https://uba.uva.nl/en/contact, or a letter to: Library of the University of Amsterdam, Secretariat, Singel 425, 1012 WP Amsterdam, The Netherlands. You will be contacted as soon as possible. UvA-DARE is a service provided by the library of the University of Amsterdam (https://dare.uva.nl) Download date:30 Sep 2021 HOME VOLUME 1: ISSUE 2 PAST ISSUES SUBMISSIONS ABOUT JHNA SUPPORT JHNA CONTACT search..
    [Show full text]
  • DALMI WORKING PAPERS on ART & MARKETS the Artistic Migration
    DALMI Working Paper No. 15231 DALMI WORKING PAPERS ON ART & MARKETS The Artistic Migration Between Mechelen and Delft (1550–1625) Fiene Leunissen Working Paper no. 15231 https://www.dukedalmi.org/wp-content/uploads/15231-Working-Paper.pdf DUKE ART, LAW & MARKETS INITIATIVE 114 S. Buchanan Blvd. Campus Box 90766 Durham, NC 27708 May 2015 DALMI working papers are circulated for discussion and comment purposes. They have not been peer-reviewed. © 2015 by Fiene Leunissen. All rights reserved. Leunissen May 2015 DALMI Working Paper No. 15231 The Artistic Migration Between Mechelen and Delft (1550–1625) Fiene Leunissen DALMI Working Paper No. 15231 May 2015 ABSTRACT Mechelen (Malines) is a small city in present-day Belgium, positioned between Antwerp and Brussels, along the river the Dijle. While most people today have never heard anything about this city or its history, this small town was once one of the most important cities in the Low Countries. It was also hub for the production of watercolor paintings. During the religious turmoil in the second half of the 16th century a large portion of artists fled the city to find a better life in other European cities. One of these places was Delft, were a group of 24 Mechelen artists settled. In this paper we look at the lives of these artists to better understand the knowledge circulation between the north and the south at the turn of the 17th century. Keywords: Art Markets, Mechelen, Delft, Seventeenth Century JEL: Z11 Leunissen May 2015 DALMI Working Paper No. 15231 Leunissen May 2015 DALMI Working Paper No.
    [Show full text]
  • Print Format
    Abel Grimmer (Antwerp 1570 - Antwerp 1618) An Allegory of Summer oil on panel 28.7 x 39.3 cm (11¼ x 15½ in) Seeking shade from the fierce summer sun, a group of harvesters recline under the boughs of a tree sharing a simple meal of bread and cheese. The whole scene bustles with activity as a number of labourers still toil in the field beyond, gathering the carefully scythed corn into neat stooks. Men, women and children all lend a hand giving a sense of dynamic community to the work. A little child dressed in a white smock can be seen wrestling with a bundle of corn far too big for her to manage. Another young child sits in the shade, his back to the viewer as he thirstily drinks from the bowl of milk that has been set upon a spotless, white table cloth. In bare feet a man and a woman frame the activity of the harvesters’ merry picnic; the woman bending forward to eat while the man leans back to drain a flagon of ale. With their hats and scythes cast aside for the brief respite provided by their meal, this group stands in contrast to the hard work still going on behind them. A little dog mischievously sniffs the picnic basket next to his unsuspecting owners, who are oblivious to everything except resting their weary limbs and sating their hunger. This imbues the ritual of the harvest with a sense of light hearted realism. In the composition of An Allegory of Summer, Abel Grimmer creates an almost pictorial narrative aided by a subtle yet highly effective use of light and shade.
    [Show full text]
  • Lucas Van Valckenborch in Wiener Sammlungen
    Diplomarbeit Titel der Diplomarbeit Lucas van Valckenborch in Wiener Sammlungen Verfasserin Ulrike Schmidl angestrebter akademischer Grad Magistra der Philosophie (Mag. phil.) Wien, im November 2010 Matrikel-Nummer: A 0503817 Studienkennzahl: A 315 Studienrichtung: Kunstgeschichte Betreuerin : Ao. Univ.-Prof. Dr. Monika Dachs-Nickel Inhalt I. Einleitung .......................................................................................................... 2 II. Provenienz ........................................................................................................ 4 III. Kostümentwürfe .............................................................................................. 10 1. Entwicklung der Kostümstudie ...................................................................................12 2. Einordnung der Kostümdarstellungen Valckenborchs ................................................13 3. Modische Gewänder in den Gemälden Valckenborchs ..............................................14 IV. Porträts ........................................................................................................... 17 1. Der Stand des Hofmalers im 16. Jahrhundert ............................................................17 2. Entwicklung des höfischen Bildnistypus .....................................................................21 3. Die Porträtliebe des Erzherzogs Matthias ..................................................................28 V. Monatsdarstellungen .....................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Ijspret - De Winters Van Hendrick Avercamp”, Rijksmuseum, 14-01-2010 Hendrick Avercamp (Amsterdam 1585-1634 Kampen) Was the Undoubted Master in Painting Ice Scenes
    1 Franz Ossing, GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences Pieter Roelofs, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam Avercamp’s Skies Revised and extended contribution to the symposium “IJspret - De winters van Hendrick Avercamp”, Rijksmuseum, 14-01-2010 Hendrick Avercamp (Amsterdam 1585-1634 Kampen) was the undoubted master in painting ice scenes. His pictures set the standard for the depiction of life on ice in Dutch landscape painting of the 17th century. Winter landscape with skaters (Fig. 1) shown in a monographic exhibition at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam and the National Gallery of Art in Washington during the Winter of 2009-2010 is a wonderful example of his skills.1 Persons from all social strata are involved in all kinds of activities imaginable on ice: skaters zoom along, children throw snow balls, the inevitable colf players aim at their target, peasants look for additional food to fight the then commonplace hunger in winter by using bird traps, water is carried in buckets from a hole sawn or hacked into the ice .... Leisure and every day chores are found closely together and entangled intimately in the essence of a winter in the Netherlands during the Little Ice Age. Fig. 1: Hendrick Avercamp: "Winterlandschap met schaatsers (Winter landscape with skaters)", c.1608, oil on panel, 77.3 x 131.9 cm, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam (click to enlarge) The Little Ice Age covers a time period from the 16th to the 19th century where temperatures were considerably lower than today average. Winters were longer and harsher than during 1 Hendrik Avercamp: “Ijspret”, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam 20.11.2009 – 15.02.2010; Washington DC., National Gallery of Art 21.03.2010 – 05.07.2010.
    [Show full text]
  • The Genre of Calendar Illustrations from Origins to Lucas and Maarten Van Valckenborch
    GHENT UNIVERSITY FACULTY OF ARTS AND PHILOSOPHY THE CYCLE OF THE YEAR: THE GENRE OF CALENDAR ILLUSTRATIONS FROM ORIGINS TO LUCAS AND MAARTEN VAN VALCKENBORCH. VOLUME I. A Thesis Submitted in 00902394 Partial Fulfillment of the Master in Art Science Requirements for the Degree Academic Year 2009- 2010. Of Master of Arts in Art Science at Ghent University Promoter: Prof. Dr. M. Martens By Nadya Lobkova Promoter: Prof. Dr. M. Martens CONTENTS VOLUME I: TEXT INTRODUCTION CHAPTER I: EMERGENCE AND FORMATION OF THE CALENDAR ICONOGRAPHY. 1. The vision of time and the year cycle in the medieval and Early Modern world picture. 2. Seasons and months in visual arts in antiquity: from allegory to the new concept. 3. Calendar illustrations in Early and High Middle Ages: 3.1. Early Middle Ages: formation of the iconography; 3.2. Moths in the High Middle Ages: regional variations; 3.3. The concept of labour in the Middle Ages. CHAPTER II: TRANSFORMATIONS OF THE GENRE BETWEEN THE LATE MIDDLE AGES AND PIETER BRUEGEL THE ELDER. 1. Calendar illustrations in Très Riches Heurs du Duc de Berry of the brothers Limbourg. 2. Calendar illustrations in XV-XVI centuries: 2.1. Page lay-out. 2.2. Iconography. 2.3. Nature and city. 3. Genre mass-produced: transition into new media. 4. Bruegel‘s Twelve Months: the crossbreeding of calendar and landscape: 5.1. The genre of landscape in the first half of the 16th century. 5.2. Bruegel‘s cycle Twelve Months: the problems of iconography. 5.3. Composition of the cycle. 5.4. Bruegel‘s drawings Spring and Summer.
    [Show full text]
  • Dutch and Flemish Art at the Utah Museum of Fine Arts A
    DUTCH AND FLEMISH ART AT THE UTAH MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS A Guide to the Collection by Ursula M. Brinkmann Pimentel Copyright © Ursula Marie Brinkmann Pimentel 1993 All Rights Reserved Published by the Utah Museum of Fine Arts, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84112. This publication is made possible, in part, by a grant from the Salt Lake County Commission. Accredited by the CONTENTS Page Acknowledgments…………………………………………………………………………………………………..……...7 History of the Utah Museum of Fine Arts and its Dutch and Flemish Collection…………………………….…..……….8 Art of the Netherlands: Visual Images as Cultural Reflections…………………………………………………….....…17 Catalogue……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….…31 Explanation of Cataloguing Practices………………………………………………………………………………….…32 1 Unknown Artist (Flemish?), Bust Portrait of a Bearded Man…………………………………………………..34 2 Ambrosius Benson, Elegant Couples Dancing in a Landscape…………………………………………………38 3 Unknown Artist (Dutch?), Visiones Apocalypticae……………………………………………………………...42 4 Pieter Bruegel the Elder, Charity (Charitas) (1559), after a drawing; Plate no. 3 of The Seven Virtues, published by Hieronymous Cock……………………………………………………………45 5 Jan (or Johan) Wierix, Pieter Coecke van Aelst holding a Palette and Brushes, no. 16 from the Cock-Lampsonius Set, first edition (1572)…………………………………………………..…48 6 Jan (or Johan) Wierix, Jan van Amstel (Jan de Hollander), no. 11 from the Cock-Lampsonius Set, first edition (1572)………………………………………………………….……….51 7 Jan van der Straet, called Stradanus, Title Page from Equile. Ioannis Austriaci
    [Show full text]
  • Jan Brueghel the Elder: the Entry of the Animals Into Noah's
    GETTY MUSEUM STUDIES ON ART JAN BRUEGHEL THE ELDER The Entry of the Animals into Noah's Ark Arianne Faber Kolb THE J. PAUL GETTY MUSEUM, LOS ANGELES © 2005 J. Paul Getty Trust Library of Congress Cover and frontispiece: Cataloging-in-Publication Data Jan Brueghel the Elder (Flemish, Getty Publications 1568-1625), The Entry of the Animals 1200 Getty Center Drive, Suite 500 Kolb, Arianne Faber into Noah's Ark, 1613 [full painting Los Angeles, California 90049-1682 Jan Brueghel the Elder : The entry and detail]. Oil on panel, 54.6 x www.getty.edu of the animals into Noah's ark / 83.8 cm (21/2 x 33 in.). Los Angeles, Arianne Faber Kolb. J. Paul Getty Museum, 92.PB.82. Christopher Hudson, Publisher p. cm. — (Getty Museum Mark Greenberg, Editor in Chief studies on art) Page i: Includes bibliographical references Anthony van Dyck (Flemish, Mollie Holtman, Series Editor and index. 1599-1641) and an unknown Abby Sider, Copy Editor ISBN 0-89236-770-9 (pbk.) engraver, Portrait of Jan Brueghel Jeffrey Cohen, Designer 1. Brueghel, Jan 1568—1625. Noah's the Elder, before 1621. Etching and Suzanne Watson, Production ark (J. Paul Getty Museum) engraving, second state, 24.9 x Coordinator 2. Noah's ark in art. 3. Painting— 15.8 cm (9% x 6/4 in.). Amsterdam, Christopher Foster, Lou Meluso, California—Los Angeles. Rijksmuseum, Rijksprentenkabinet, Charles Passela, Jack Ross, 4. J. Paul Getty Museum. I. Title. RP-P-OP-II.II3. Photographers II. Series. ND673.B72A7 2004 Typesetting by Diane Franco 759.9493 dc22 Printed in China by Imago 2005014758 All photographs are copyrighted by the issuing institutions, unless other- wise indicated.
    [Show full text]
  • A Panoramic Mountain Landscape, with a City, Possibly Frankfurt, Beyond Oil on Canvas 53.5 X 81 Cm (21 X 31⅞ In)
    Lucas van Valckenborch (Leuven c.1530 - Frankfurt am Main 1597) A Panoramic Mountain Landscape, with a City, possibly Frankfurt, beyond oil on canvas 53.5 x 81 cm (21 x 31⅞ in) This panoramic scene is typical of Lucas van Valckenborch’s mountainous landscape paintings. The left- hand side of the work is dominated by a bare crag, projecting into the sky. In its shadow lies a dense forest, a fiercely flowing river, and a mill. Beyond this precipitous foreground is vast river valley containing a large sprawling city. This painting is actually a larger version of a work in the Liechtenstein Princely Collections. Our work is painted on canvas, whereas the Liechtenstein version is on panel, although this change of support is not unusual for van Valckenborch, who also frequently used copper. The Liechtenstein version is dated 1595, towards the end of van Valckenborch’s career, and it therefore seems likely that ours is a similarly mature work. In a discussion of the Liechtenstein version, Walter Liedtke suggests that the city nestling in the river valley is probably based on Frankfurt.¹ Van Valckenborch certainly included faithful topographical depictions of other cities, such as Linz or Antwerp, in his work, and the Liechtenstein painting dates from his Frankfurt period. As Liedtke points out, ‘the long bridge that crossed the city’s wall between the town of Sachsenhausen and Frankfurt met the city’s walls at a square tower like the one seen here’.² Liedtke also points to the fact that many of the many details, such as the round and square towers, or the scale and style of the Cathedral, recall contemporary depictions of Frankfurt.
    [Show full text]
  • Hendrick Avercamp a Scene on The
    Hendrick Avercamp 1585-1634 HENDRICK AVERCAMP, born in Amsterdam in a (1585/1586-1635), and Dirck Hardenstein II (1620- house next to the Nieuwe Kerk, was baptized in the after 1674). Oude Kerk on 27 January 1585. In 1586 the family moved to Kampen, where Avercamp's father set up Notes an apothecary's business that continued to be run 1. Avercamp, however, must have occasionally returned to Amsterdam, as is suggested by a drawing he made of the after his death by his son Lambert. Another son also Haarlemmerpoort in Amsterdam, which was constructed studied medicine, and the members of this well-edu­ between 1615 and 1618. See Amsterdam 1993a: 56, no. 23, cated family were for many years prominent citizens repro. of Kampen. Bibliography For his artistic training, Hendrick went to Am­ Welcker 1933/1979. sterdam to study with the Danish portrait painter Amsterdam 1982a. Pieter Isaacks (1569-1625). In 1607, King Christiaan Blankert 1982a. IV recalled Isaacks to Denmark, and Avercamp ap­ Wiersma 1985. Amsterdam 1987: 254-261. pears among the list of buyers at the auction of his Brown/MacLaren 1992: 3. teacher's effects as "de stom tot Pieter Isacqs" [Pieter Isaacks' mute]. Various other records testify to Aver- camp's disability: in 1622, a document refers to him as "Hendrick Avercamp de Stomme," and his 1967.3.1 (2315) mother's will, drawn up in 1633, instructs that her unmarried, "mute and miserable" son Hendrick A Scene on the Ice should receive, in addition to his portion of the in­ heritance, an extra allowance of one hundred guild­ c.
    [Show full text]
  • Abstracts of Amsterdam 2010 Conference Papers
    Abstracts of Amsterdam 2010 Conference Papers Thursday, May 27, 2010 PARAGONE, SYMBIOSIS: RELATIONS BETWEEN PAINTING AND SCULPTURE IN NETHERLANDISH ART Chair: Lynn F. Jacobs (University of Arkansas) Kim W. Woods, Open University, [email protected] Early Netherlandish Painting and Sculpture: A Paragone? Early Netherlandish painters faced an artistic world in which painting arguably occupied a less prestigious position than sculpture, metalwork, tapestry and embroidery. Despite his much vaunted position as painter and ‘varlet de chambre’ of Duke Philip the Good of Burgundy, there is no evidence that Jan van Eyck undertook a single large-scale commission from his employer, while the published ducal accounts record large sums spent on other artistic projects. In building their immense reputations, and putting early Netherlandish painting on the cultural map of north-west Europe, Van Eyck, the Master of Flemalle and Rogier van der Weyden all had to establish their art in relation to other media. This paper aims to gather together some visual and documentary threads relating to the relative importance of painting and sculpture up to the mid 15th century. For example, it seems no accident that one of Jan van Eyck’s most virtuoso works, the Annunciation diptych in the Museo Thyssen Bornemisza in Madrid, evokes alabaster statues at exactly the time that fellow Bruges sculptor and ducal employee Gilles de Backere was working on the alabaster tomb of Michelle of France for Philip the Good. What evidence is there for a visual competition with sculpture in early Netherlandish painting? Around the same time, Jacques Daret was commissioned to paint shutters for an alabaster altarpiece for the Abbot of St.
    [Show full text]
  • The Rubenianum Quarterly
    2015 The Rubenianum Quarterly 3 A fine gesture from one of our donors ‘Wow! What a show’ intensifies the bond between scholars and patrons These four words, uttered by the highly esteemed From April to November 2015 Elise Boutsen is strengthening the director of a leading British museum, perfectly Rubenianum ranks as a project associate. Thanks to a generous gift from capture the tone of the praise garnered by the Mr Eric Le Jeune, she is immersing herself in the world of the wooded recent exhibition at the Rubenshuis: ‘Rubens landscape, sifting through the Rubenianum’s paper documentation on in Private. The Master Portrays his Family’ the Frankenthal school and creating some 500 online records in the (28 March–28 June). The show – the first to be dedicated to the more private side of Rubens’s genius, RKDimages database to which the Rubenianum has been contributing featuring a selection of self-portraits and portraits since 2012. Elise improves and adds to our on-site documentation and of family members and friends – attracted more markedly expands the online presence of these Protestant landscape than 100,000 visitors. Similarly, the catalogue artists, who fled Antwerp for Frankenthal after the city’s fall in 1585. (‘beautifully produced and much anticipated’ – Her research will also result in the publication of an article on the subject. HNA Review of Books, August 2015) sold out before the exhibition closed. Mr Le Jeune is passionate about Flemish painting. On arrival at the The public was surprised, above all, by the warm, Rubenianum he enthusiastically reports on a recent visit to the devoted intimacy of the portraits and drawings St Petersburg State Hermitage Museum.
    [Show full text]