XXXI PAINTING PRIOR TO THE GREAT MASTERS IT would not be right to start in upon the great Spanish painters without some sort of prologue. I shall not attempt to speak of the earliest stages of pictorial art, nor of the primitives. Lovers of such things will find delicate miniatures on codices in the Escorial, such as those of the Cantigas of Alfonso el Sabio; they betray, I am told -- and as one would expect to find -- the influence of French art. Old frescoes are scattered about in churches here and there, in which connoisseurs detect Byzantine, French, or Tuscan influences; and there are many paintings of the fifteenth century, for instance, such as the altar screens by cuatrocentistas catalanes, well worth a leisurely study. But no real notability ap- pears in the story of Spanish painting until the famous journey of Jan Van Eyck, who came in the train of the Burgundian ambassador ( 1428-29) for the express purpose of painting a Portuguese prin- cess, -- "peindre bien au vif la figure de madite dame l'Infante," -- in order to enable his master, the Duke of Burgundy, to decide whether he should like to marry her. Van Eyck painted the princess, who was charming, and probably traveled through Spain from Santiago of Compostela to Granada. What painters he saw and what his influence may have -231- |