Jan Gossaert: Die niederlandische Kunst zu Beginn der Neuzeit.Ariane Mensger. Jan Gossaert: Die niederlandische Kunst zu Beginn der Neuzeit. Berlin: Dietrich Reimer Verlag GmbH, 2002.240 pp. index. append. illus. bibl. [euro] 64. ISBN ISBN abbr. International Standard Book Number ISBN International Standard Book Number ISBN n abbr (= International Standard Book Number) → ISBN m : 3-496-01266-8. Jan Gossaert, the early standard-bearer of the Netherlandish Renaissance, is the subject of a new monograph by Ariane Mensger, the first general consideration of the artist since the Gossaert exhibition in Bruges of 1965 and the revision of Max J. Friedlander's volume from the series Early Netherlandish Painting Early Netherlandish painting[1] is a term art historians use to designate the work of a group of painters who were active primarily in the Low Countries in the 15th and early 16th centuries, approximately the period starting with Van Eyck and ending with Gerard David. in 1972. Gossaert, darling of Netherlandish court society and an impressive artistic innovator, fell out of favor in the early twentieth century; Friedlander branded him a tasteless imitator of the fifteenth-century primitifs whom he so loved and a mannered practitioner of an Italian mode, far removed from a reigning aesthetic canon based largely on Raphael. But opinions have changed considerably during the last several decades with far more nuanced views of Italianate manners and mannerism mannerism, a style in art and architecture (c.1520–1600), originating in Italy as a reaction against the equilibrium of form and proportions characteristic of the High Renaissance. replacing older models. Mensger's book admirably brings the study of Gossaert up to date with a complete account of art historical literature on her subject. Her book, based on her dissertation, comprises a series of short informative essays on different aspects of the artist's work that offer an excellent introduction to her subject. The Malvagna Triptych is the centerpiece of a discussion of Gossaert's interest in Late Gothic forms. These, Mensger declares, are contemporaneous with the painter's early investigations of Renaissance imagery and are not simply the early stage of a linear stylistic progression. Indeed, as has been noted, the wings of the Salamanca Triptych, dated 1521, display on their exterior Late Gothic molding that frames the Virgin and Archangel archangel, in religion archangel (ärk`ānjəl), chief angel. They are four to seven in number. Sometimes specific functions are ascribed to them. The four best known in Christian tradition are Michael, Gabriel, Raphael, and Uriel. Gabriel, while, on the interior, Italianate niches are provided for Saints Peter and John the Baptist John the Baptist prophet who baptized crowds and preached Christ’s coming. [N.T.: Matthew 3:1–13] See : Baptism John the Baptist head presented as gift to Salome. [N.T.: Mark 6:25–28] See : Decapitation . A certain stylistic pluralism is typical of Gossaert and the period. Jan van Roome, painter to Margaret of Austria Margaret of Austria, 1480–1530, Hapsburg princess, regent of the Netherlands; daughter of Emperor Maximilian I. She was betrothed (1483) to the dauphin of France, later King Charles VIII, and was transferred to the guardianship of Louis XI of France (see Arras, , also worked in both a Late Gothic and Italianate mode simultaneously, as did the architects Pierre Chambiges in France and Benedikt Ried in Prague. Mensger is no doubt correct in pointing to the strong Bruges inflection of the figure group in the Malvagna Triptych, yet Gossaert's remarkable architectural design--the magnificent intricately drafted tabernacle that shelters the figures--is a brilliant invention in the Brabantine idiom, as the author's comparative material suggests. Although the small altarpiece altarpiece Painting, relief, sculpture, screen, or decorated wall standing on or behind an altar in a Christian church. The images depict holy personages, saints, and biblical subjects. was in Sicily by an early date, it is somewhat misleading to refer to the work as "Late Gothic for export." Gossaert's paintings traveled through the hands of the nobility and high-placed commoners like Jean Carondelet and Antonio Siciliano Si`ci`li`a´no n. 1. A Sicilian dance, resembling the pastorale, set to a rather slow and graceful melody in 12-8 or 6-8 measure; also, the music to the dance. . The Malvagna Triptych was likely made on commission for a patron who may have chosen to carry it abroad or bestow it upon a foreign recipient. It was not intended principally for export in the way that so many Netherlandish carved altarpieces of the period were sold. A look at Gossaert's relationship to Jan van Eyck reveals a sophisticated array of hommages to the earlier artist, creative reworkings of van Eyck's inventions and adaptations to a new age. Jan van Eyck gives rise to a new classicism of sorts to which Gossaert refers in the Prado Deisis and the portrait of Jean Carondelet, which is paired with the bust-length view of St. Donatius. The Doria copy of Van Eyck's Madonna Standing in a Church, of course, is a more direct emulation of this founder of the Netherlandish school of painting, already touted in the contemporary verses of Jean Lemaire de Belges Jean Lemaire de Belges (c. 1473 – c. 1525) was a Walloon poet and historian who lived primarily in France. He was born in Hainaut (Hainault), the godson and possibly a nephew of Jean Molinet, and spent some time with him at Valenciennes, where the elder writer held a . The vogue for Van Eyck can be related to a heightened consciousness of art as a discrete realm of human endeavor and source of authority. Mensger discusses the relationship between her painter and the court humanist Gerardus Geldenhauer, whose praise of painting in verse is given in an appendix. As the author details in her treatment of the mythological works that come from Gossaert's brush, paintings are increasingly divorced from the functions that previously circumscribed circumscribed /cir·cum·scribed/ (serk´um-skribd) bounded or limited; confined to a limited space. cir·cum·scribed adj. Bounded by a line; limited or confined. their experience. The private collection, the cabinet, becomes the intended site of display and no longer the church chapel or town hall. Mensger's exploration of Gossaert's debt to the legacy of antiquity and his devising of several Italianate modes is one of the strengths of her book. Court society is identified as the birthplace of this new direction in the arts, and Mensger discusses Gossaert's use of Italianate forms in the new political discourse of rulers and the high nobility. Gossaert's journey to Rome and his work for Philip of Burgundy There are a number of men called Philip of Burgundy:
n. pl. to·poi A traditional theme or motif; a literary convention. [Greek, short for (koinos) topos, (common)place.] Noun 1. to the new classical subject matter. Mensger's monograph is illustrated entirely with black-and-white reproductions of generally good quality. ETHAN MATT KAVALER University of Toronto Research at the University of Toronto has been responsible for the world's first electronic heart pacemaker, artificial larynx, single-lung transplant, nerve transplant, artificial pancreas, chemical laser, G-suit, the first practical electron microscope, the first cloning of T-cells, |
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