FLEMISH ART AND ARCHITECTURE

works of art and structures produced in the region of Europe known for centuries as Flanders. Netherlandish art is another term sometimes used for these works. Art produced in Flanders achieved special eminence c.1200 and in the 15th and 17th cent. Flanders was among the most culturally productive regions at other times as well.

The Medieval Period

During the Middle Ages, Flemish art followed the contemporary early Christian, Carolingian, and Romanesque styles. In the 12th cent. Rainer of Huy, Godefroid de Claire, and Nicholas of Verdun, among others, were noted for their work in metal and enamel. In the same century an important late Romanesque cathedral was built at Tournai (see Romanesque architecture and art). In succeeding centuries, the metalworks of Dinant lent their name to the French word dinanderie, for metalwork, and Flemish brass workers and copper workers produced sophisticated pieces.

Splendid examples of secular architecture were executed in the 14th and 15th cent., including the Ypres cloth hall and the city halls of Brussels and Louvain. At Tournai painting, sculpture, and tapestry-making also flourished. Flanders followed the French in their adaptation of Gothic styles until the late 14th cent., when Flemish artists contributed vigorously realistic figures to the elegant, more fragile French manner of painting and manuscript illumination (see also Gothic architecture and art). Jean de Cambrai introduced similarly powerful and realistic forms into French sculpture, along with André Beauneveu and Jacques de Baerze. Jean Bondol of Bruges was a leading illuminator and tapestry designer.

The marriage in 1369 of the daughter of the count of Flanders to the duke of Burgundy led to a concentration of artists around the wealthy Burgundian court. It was the center of activity for such painters and manuscript illuminators as Melchior Broederlam, the Limbourg brothers, the Boucicaut master, Jean Malouel, and Jan van Eyck. Claus Sluter executed the famous sculpture at the court-sponsored Carthusian monastery of Champmol.

The Northern Renaissance and Its Aftermath

In Flanders Renaissance works of art took on a character quite different from those of Italy. The masterpieces of 15th-century Flemish painting are remarkable for their acute observation of nature, symbolism in realistic disguise, depiction of spatial depth and landscape backgrounds, and delicate precision of brushwork. The achievements in symbolism (see iconography) and realism of Robert Campin (identified with the Master of Flémalle) and the Van Eycks, who mastered the technique of oil painting in the first third of the century, were continued in the second third by Roger van der Weyden, Dieric Bouts, and Petrus Christus. These artists refined the depiction of psychological expression, landscape, and space.

In the last third of the 15th cent. Hugo van der Goes and Hieronymus Bosch were especially sensitive to complex emotional expression and fantastic subject matter, while Hans Memling, Gerard David, Joachim Patinir, Quentin Massys, Justus of Ghent, and Joos van Cleef produced paintings in a calmer mood, based on the achievements of earlier Flemings with occasional influences from Italian art. In general, with the exception of the brilliantly original Pieter Bruegel, the elder, late 15th-century Flemish art followed Italian models, although it preserved interest in genre realism and landscape painting as seen in the works of Paul Brill, Gillis van Coninxloo, and others.

Italy attracted many 16th-century artists, such as Jan Gossaert and Jan van Scorel, who returned to Flanders and imported Italian Renaissance forms and motifs into the North. At this time the center of Flemish artistic activity moved to Antwerp, where a school of mannerist artists arose, more clearly influenced by Southern European aesthetic development (see mannerism). Frans Floris was a leading representative of this trend. The 16th-century landscape style, emphasizing exquisite detail and brilliant color, persisted in the works of Jan Bruegel, the elder; Roelandt Savery; Joost de Momper; and Gilles de Hondecoeter, who worked in Holland.

Achievements of the Seventeenth Century

With Rubens, Flemish art again became preeminent in Europe, and his influence dominated painting throughout much of the 17th cent. The greatest patron of Flemish art remained the church, and Rubens's greatest influence was exerted through his religious paintings rather than his portraiture or his apotheoses of European rulers. Elements of his energetic line, brushwork, and understanding of form, his rich, warm color, and his ideal of robust beauty were emulated in the work of his pupil Jacob Jordaens and in that of his more consciously elegant and more highly individual follower Sir Anthony Van Dyck.

Still life and genre painting also flourished in 17th-century Flanders. Outstanding still-life painters included Jan Bruegel and Frans Snyders; genre painters included David Teniers and Adriaen Brouwer. The principal exponent of classicism, the painter Abraham Janssens, brought elements of Caravaggesque painting to the Flemish school (see Caravaggio, Michelangelo Merisi da). The graphic arts also flourished in Flanders at this time. The principal Flemish sculptor was François Duquesnoy, who practiced in Italy. Architecture in the later 16th and 17th cent. blended heavy northern decorative taste and steeply pitched roofs with Italian mannerist and baroque forms; the Antwerp town hall (1561–65) and Rubens's house (c.1610) are characteristic buildings.

The Eighteenth through the Twentieth Centuries

In the 18th cent. French rococo taste predominated in Flanders, but in the 19th cent. a flourishing Belgian school of romantic painters arose (see romanticism). They included Gustave Wappers, Hendrik Leys, and the genre painter Henri de Braekeleer (1840–88). Two other noted Belgians, Alfred Stevens and Henri Evenepoel, worked chiefly in Paris.

A number of figures stand out as exemplars of modern Belgian art. Foremost is James Ensor, an individualistic painter of grotesque personal visions whose major works were created by 1900. Important artists of the 20th cent. include the founders of Belgian expressionism, Jakob Smits and Eugene Laermans; the sculptor and painter Rik Wouters and later expressionist painters Frits van den Berghe and Constant Permeke; the internationally recognized exponents of surrealism Paul Delvaux and René Margritte; and the later painters of the abstract school Anne Bonnet and Louis van Lint. Victor Horta and Henri van de Velde are the major 20th-century Belgians architects.

Bibliography

See M. D. Whinney, Early Flemish Painting (1968); W. Gaunt, Flemish Cities (1970); L. and T. van Puyvelde, Flemish Painting (2 vol., tr. 1970 and 1972); M. Friedländer, Early Netherlandish Painting (9 vol. in 10, tr. 1967–72).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Flemish Art and Architecture  - 3792 results

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...1100-1600 A Survey of Architecture and Art By John Harvey B. T...was distinctive of Gothic art that architecture led the way: all other arts...and many features of Gothic architecture and art can only be explained as...
...1500 TO 1700 ANTHONY BLUNT ANTHONY BLUNT ART AND ARCHITECTURE IN FRANCE 1500 TO 1700 PENGUIN BOOKS MELBOURNE...Philippe de Champaigne and Flemish Influence 173...
Art and Architecture in Medieval France Frontispiece : Reims Cathedral. Choir and nave Art and Architecture in Medieval France MEDIEVAL...University of Chicago Press, 1954 . ART AND ARCHITECTURE IN MEDIEVAL FRANCE. Copyright...
...Designs Signs and Designs Art and Architecture in the Work of Michel Butor...temps 57 3 Art, Architecture and Catholicism in La Modification...9 Butor's interest in art and architecture has also made a profound...
...great many works of art, such as statues, pulpits...famous example of his architecture is the church of San...imitators of the Spanish and Flemish models, and their work...attempts to integrate art and architecture. They will be discussed...
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journal articles on: Flemish Art and Architecture  - 80 results

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...structural architecture of sound...ideal applied art. My quasi-formalist...half-blood ... a Flemish country that...colleagues in art, design, architecture, and theater...1922 in the Flemish journal Het...pure-plastic art," in which...becomes the architecture of sounds...
...that several art historians have...fifteenth-century Franco-Flemish illuminations-what...The elaborate architecture, with typological...the 1430s in Flemish art, intensifies...late medieval art; instead, his...only rarely in Flemish altarpieces this...
...constructed in the styles of Titian and Flemish painting provide important clues to understanding...as she was most often in Renaissance art, and became instead the creative force...misura, disegno, and maniera): Rule in architecture was the way of measuring antiquities...
...sculpture or architecture, let alone...Northern art, chiefly...founder of Flemish Primitives...Netherlandish architecture is now illuminated...glass. (53) Flemish metalwork...Performance art and spectacle...churches, German architecture remains neglected...and Spanish art are no longer...relative to Flemish art. For...
...reconstructions of Roman architecture or weaponry.30...rebirth of antique art, for not until...Antique Works of Art and Architecture Known in the Renaissance...Iconography of Medieval Architecture," in Studies in...and Renaissance Art (New York: New...
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magazine articles on: Flemish Art and Architecture  - 57 results

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...brought with them the reigning Hispano-Flemish style, typified by high-finish paintings...on a single altar. Like European art centers from the same period--roughly 1500 to 1800--Cuzcos costly art, architecture and high-quality craftsmanship were...
...Sussex brick in a Flemish bond frames inlaid...attitude to how art should be hung...practice of art and architecture--this building...British Modern art and encapsulating...one of British architectures most enduring...himself and his architecture to be inspired...great Modern art. Chichester may...
...so-called civilization sliding into an inferno. Interest in the Flemish school of painting, with its attention to detail, optical games...to our times. Caleb Bach is a former teacher of Spanish and art history and a longtime contributor to Americas. He would like...
...as Vienna 1900 does, in the context of architecture and craft, of couture, ornament and design...for there is no sense in which their art can be seen as decorative. So between...this, Fromentin goes on to suggest, the Flemish master shows how close painting then was...
...placement of the figures in the architecture--on the balcony, behind the...realist imperative of Mughal art, counting is problematic--figures...of the sort we see in the Flemish masters, which shows how things...perspective. The life of Mughal art is in the details. You have...
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newspaper articles on: Flemish Art and Architecture  - 37 results

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...best bars, restaurants and boutiques are, as well as historical pit-stops. The distinctive mixture of Flemish, art nouveau and gabled architecture is enchanting. We stopped for a citron presse at le Square dAramis, a small bar on Rue Basse that looked...
...transfixingBotticelli. And contemporary art forms the core of the Collection Lambert...from which to explore theremarkable Roman architecture of Arles and its arena, Nimes and its...Memling Museum (devotedto the works of the Flemish painter and former Bruges resident Hans...
...slouch in the world of architecture. It costs nothing to...However, the museums art collection is worth...1890 and 1892 in the Flemish Renaissance style, the...abroad to see great architecture, past and present Need...history and penchant for art is The Pfister, which...
...painter of still lives of largely Flemish character with more than a...characteristic of the British art establishment today, but Miss...introduction to Catalan art, architecture, sculpture and applied arts...profitable subject of the easy art book. Certainly Michael Peppiatts...
...Valdivian cultures. Exhibits on Dutch and Flemish painting and South Italian Style Greek...of the past," says Mr. Vikan. "That is art." +++++ IF YOU GO WHAT: The Walters...of the finest examples of neo-classical architecture in the world. 7 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Friday...
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encyclopedia articles on: Flemish Art and Architecture  - 17 results

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FLEMISH ART AND ARCHITECTURE works of...Romanesque architecture and art ). In succeeding...metalwork, and Flemish brass workers...cent., when Flemish artists contributed...also Gothic architecture and art ). Jean de Cambrai...
...Europe. A pervasive element in Spanish architecture is the Mudejar style, whose influence...stylizations associated with most Islamic art. Gothic churches, particularly in the...and early 16th cent. there were strong Flemish and German trends. Retables and choir...
...in the Gothic tradition. Under the influence of Flemish and Italian art, France produced admirable portraitists such as...Italian Renaissance began to permeate Europe. Architecture of the Renaissance During the Renaissance the...
...separated sculpture from architecture. In the 14th cent...found in French Gothic art. Other Gothic Arts...the 14th cent., many Flemish artists went to France...E. Panofsky, Gothic Architecture and Scholasticism...Martindale, Gothic Art (1967); W. Swaan...
...French Gothic style throughout Europe (see Gothic architecture and art ), notable contributions were made by the Germans...paintings of Stephan Lochner are among those that reflect Flemish influence, particularly of the van Eycks and of Rogier...
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