Название: Landscapes
Автор: Émile Michel
Издательство: Parkstone International Publishing
Жанр: Иностранные языки
Серия: Temporis
isbn: 978-1-78042-881-9, 978-1-78310-784-1
isbn:
Hans Memling, St. Veronica (Triptych of Jan Floreins, reverse), c.1470–1475.
Oil on panel, 30.3 × 22.8 cm.
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D. C.
Gerard David, Triptych of the Sedano Family (left wing: Jean de Sedano and his son; central panel: The Virgin and Child between Angel Musicians; right wing: Marie, wife of Jean de Sedano, with St. John the Evangelist, c.1490–1495.
Oil on wood, 97 × 72 cm (central panel); 91 × 30 cm (shutters).
Paris.
On looking at this prodigious work, one feels the presence of a superior mind, but elevated as is the conception, one feels that it is also interpreted by a painter. An intelligent love of reality is manifested in the execution of all the details. The myriads of flowers studded in the thick grass have their separate import and expression. They all contribute to the beautification of that delicate grassy carpet, whose soft green contrasts with the startling reds of the costumes of the various personages. The exotic vegetation is studied with the same conscientiousness. The artist does not display this Southern flora which he has borrowed for the mere sake of attracting attention. Here there are none of the eccentricities peculiar to those travellers of all times who make the most of their excursions and of the extraordinary things they may have seen. Although the landscape is an imaginary one composed of heterogeneous elements, it looks real, and its main lines as well as its general harmony give it logical unity. The drawing is extremely true and striking. Without conventionality, it draws its strength, variety, and correctness from reality. The perspective, as regards the essential rules, is astonishingly correct for that period. The question is whether the Van Eycks formulated their own rules, whether they received them from those who had preceded them, or whether, with their keen understanding, they discovered the laws for themselves in their conscientious consultations with nature. It would be difficult to decide this; but we must admit that their knowledge of perspective was very thorough.
If Jan van Eyck was not alone responsible for this immense piece of work, he certainly did the greater part of it. Far from being exhausted by this task, he soon afterwards gave proof of his prolific talent by other works which prove even more the originality and flexibility of his genius.
Hieronymus Bosch, The Adoration of the Magi, c.1495.
Oil on wood, 138 × 138 cm.
Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid.
The excellence of the Van Eycks is most evident when they are compared with their predecessors. It is none the less striking when they are compared with the painters who succeeded them. The charm of naturalness, the force and frankness of expression which we admire in them, is not to be met with in the same degree in the period that followed. They seemed to reach perfection at once, and to fix with decisive authority the limits of their art. With them and their immediate successors, Rogier van der Weyden (c.1399–1464) and Hans Memling (c.1430–1494), terminates that initial period of Flemish art in all its freshness. The impressions it interpreted were honestly felt, and there was no touch of conventionalism to modify its frankness. Subsequently the very genius of these early masters hampered their successors and paralysed the originality of their talent. Whether they yielded to involuntary reminiscences, or whether, on the contrary, they tried to refrain from following the example of their predecessors, an unconscious mannerism crept into their works and gave them a somewhat affected and artificial character. Following Gerard David’s example, some of his contemporaries were induced to attempt a too detailed imitation of nature, whilst others endeavoured to seek for themselves new paths in the domain of the fantastic and marvellous. Hieronymus van Aken (c.1450–1516), better known as Bosch, is celebrated for his Temptations, Hells, and the diabolical visions which were his specialty, but his originality is evident when he restricts himself to the representations of nature. In one of his most remarkable works, the triptych entitled The Adoration of the Magi, the landscape, which stretches away beyond the cradle, is rendered with great detail.
By the firmness of the drawing and the truthfulness of the colour, he has expressed very forcibly the character of one of those wild districts, whose poetry had not hitherto tempted the brush of his predecessors. A stream of water, overhung by beautiful trees, is to be seen, and, farther away, uncultivated land sparsely covered with grass.
In time the taste for painting gradually became more general throughout the Netherlands, but, attracted by the ever-increasing prestige of the Italian Renaissance, Flemish artists began to cross the mountains in search of their idyll and to complete their education. As a result of this migration toward the South we see the originality of the old national art of the Netherlands gradually disappear. By coming into contact with foreign art, it lost that sincerity which had been its great force. All attempts to conciliate aspirations so contrary, notwithstanding the talent of those who made them, resulted in hybrid productions devoid both of style and naturalness.
Joachim Patinir, Landscape with St. Jerome, 1516–1517.
Oil on wood, 74 × 91 cm.
Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid.
Geertgen tot Sint Jans, Saint John the Baptist in the Desert, c.1490.
Oil on wood, 42 × 28 cm.
Alte Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Berlin.
Nevertheless, the name of Bernard van Orley deserves to be remembered among the painters we have just mentioned. After his return from Italy his talent certainly developed and was unique unto himself. But it is not in his pictures that we must look for the best proofs of his originality as a landscapist. Van Orley was a decorator of the first rank and, together with his designs for the beautiful St. Gudule windows, those of several series of tapestries, particularly Maximilian’s hunting scenes, deserves mention for the breadth with which the landscape is treated. In the series of the Twelve Months, some panels of which are in the Louvre, there are various hunting episodes which give a faithful picture of the country around Brussels, Soignie Forest, Tervuren, Septfontaines, with the castles, convents, pools, or rivers in the neighbourhood. The plants and shrubs skilfully grouped in the foreground of these compositions testify to a scrupulous study of the local flora, which has also furnished the motives of the designs of the borders. But such exactness is quite exceptional with the Flemish painters of this period.
We must mention Joachim Patenier, who was for a long time regarded by critics as the inventor of landscape painting as a separate branch of art sufficient in itself. Of him, who is said to have been Herri met de Bles’ master, many fables have been told. There is, however, nothing among the few certain dates and facts that we know of his life to justify the reputation for drunkenness and disorder attributed to him by certain chroniclers. He went at an early age to live in Antwerp, and in 1515 was a member of the Guild there. Albrecht Dürer, who was travelling in the Netherlands, was present at his induction, which took place in 1521. Dürer was celebrated greatly by Patenier, who appreciated the young artist’s talent. As a souvenir of his visit, Dürer not only painted his portrait, but also left him several sketches of little figures for his compositions.
Patenier frequently placed his brush at the service of his fellow artists. He was one of the first to set the example of those collaborations which subsequently became so frequent. For several of his fellow artists he painted the backgrounds of their pictures. His ability and also his care and conscientiousness in the execution of his work would serve, СКАЧАТЬ