A History of European Art

(Steven Felgate) #1

Lecture 15: Northern Renaissance Altarpieces


Northern Renaissance Altarpieces ...................................................


Lecture 15

In the second of the lectures we are devoting to the Northern Renaissance,
we are going to look at a handful of remarkable altarpieces and one
very beautiful portrait in contrast; that is the content of this lecture.
... [T]hese large altarpieces will help us to observe the remarkable
expressive and stylistic range of 15th-century northern painting through
these masterpieces.

W


e will see how three artists, Robert Campin, Rogier van der
Weyden, and Hugo van der Goes, depicted religious subjects on
their altarpieces. In addition, we will explore the expressive and
stylistic range of northern painting, examine elements of symbolism, and
relate advances in technique in these works.

Robert Campin (c. 1375/80–1444) was one of the founders of Netherlandish
painting. Campin worked in Tournai, south of Bruges and Ghent, and his
paintings often incorporate views of the town. Our ¿ rst example is his oil-
on-panel triptych of the Annunciation, picturing the donors and St. Joseph
(c. 1425). This is sometimes referred to as the Mérode Altarpiece for the
family that owned it for many years. It was commissioned around 1425 by a
couple named Inghelbrechts in the city of Tournai. This portable altarpiece
is only 25” x 46” when open. On the left wing, the donors are seen kneeling
in a small courtyard just outside a door that leads to the room in which the
Annunciation unfolds. The woman was added, probably after the couple
was married, since she is painted over the grass. A servant stands at the
gate to the town; one historian has suggested that this is a self-portrait of
Robert Campin.

On the central panel is the Virgin of Humility, who seems not to notice the
angel who has come through the door. The lavábo and towel in the niche
parallel those we saw in the Ghent Altar Annunciation and carry the same
symbolic meaning. The lilies on the table also refer to Mary’s virginity
and the Incarnation. The Incarnation is imminent; a tiny ¿ gure carrying a
miniature cross has entered the room through the glass window at the left,
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