EARLY NETHERLANDISH PAINTING
A fully illustrated survey of Early Netherlandish painting,
featuring all of the major artists, and many lesser-known
painters.
Early Netherlandish painting, also known as Flemish painting, is
characterized by figurative realism, its incredible sense of
domestic interiors and details, luminous light, its realist faces,
and its fusions of a micro- and macro- cosmic vision.
We concentrate here on painters such as Rogier van der Weyden
(1400-1464), Jan van Eyck (c. 1390-1441, commonly described as the
founder of modern oil painting), Gerard David (c. 1460-1523), Hugo
van der Goes (1440-1482), Hans Memling (1433-1494), Joos van Cleve
(c. 1485-1540), Jan Gossaert, also called Mabuse (c. 1475/8-1532),
Geertgen tot Sint Jans (fl. late 15th 1485/ 95), Quentin Massys (c.
1465-1530), Joachim Patinir (c. 1485-1524), Dieric Bouts (c.
1415-1475), Petrus Christus (fl. 1442-1473) and Bernard van Orley
(c. 1488-1541).
One of the most celebrated aspects of Early Netherlandish or
Flemish painting is its heartfelt, intense religious emotion. It is
this aspect that interests us in this book. The new aesthetic
vision of Early Netherlandish art was later applied to still life
paintings, satires, landscapes, and portraits, but it is the
religious works with which we are concentrating on here.
Michelangelos famous statement about Early Netherlandish art
pinpoints the depth of devout feeling found in so much of Northern
European art:
Flemish painting will, generally speaking, please the devout
better than any painting in Italy, which will never cause him to
shed a tear, whereas that of Flanders will cause him to shed
many...
The new vision of Northern European painting which flourished in
the 15th century was a combination of a new aesthetic approach to
reality, and an intensifying of religious fervour. The new vision
aimed at sculptural accuracy, a naturalistic use of lighting, and
three-dimensionality. Mixed with the new use of oil paint, the new
vision gave the art of Philip the Goods reign a special flavour and
style well suited to the circumscription of devout religious
truths. The new painting inherited its jewel-like brilliancy partly
because many painters were trained as goldsmiths. This skilled
handling of metalwork and miniature illustration shows in Early
Netherlandish art.
All Early Netherlandish paintings were made on wood panels, and
painted from light to dark in thin glazes. It is partly this subtle
glazing which gives Early Netherlandish painting its glorious
luminescence. The Early Netherlandish artists exploited the effects
of different hues and thicknesses of glazes of oil paint,
controlling how the glazes reflected light.
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