Sunday, February 14, 2021

Flemish / Netherlandish Panel Paintings (before 1500) - II

workshop of Robert Campin
Madonna of the Firescreen
ca. 1440
tempera and oil on panel
National Gallery, London

workshop of Robert Campin
Madonna of the Firescreen (detail)
ca. 1440
tempera and oil on panel
National Gallery, London

workshop of Robert Campin
Madonna of the Firescreen (detail)
ca. 1440
tempera and oil on panel
National Gallery, London

Rogier van der Weyden
St John the Baptist Triptych
(Birth of John the Baptist)
ca. 1455
oil on panel (left-hand panel)
Gemäldegalerie, Berlin

Rogier van der Weyden
St John the Baptist Triptych
(Baptism of Christ)
ca. 1455
oil on panel (central panel)
Gemäldegalerie, Berlin

Rogier van der Weyden
St John the Baptist Triptych
(Beheading of St John the Baptist)
ca. 1455
oil on panel (right-hand panel)
Gemäldegalerie, Berlin

"In the symbolism of the middle ages nothing had an unequivocal meaning; everything could be applied or explained in several different ways.  Indeed, the world of things contained manifold disguises for God's being and, if we peruse the philosophical, theological, and moralising treatises or the mystic writings of the period, we are confronted with a profusion of metaphor and symbolism, which was the only way of speaking about the unspeakable.  It was a question of dealing creatively with the visible world, with objects and natural phenomena that were supposed to express invisible concepts or qualities through comparison.  The more one acquired a thorough understanding of this comparative technique, the more one was able to view the world as ever more complex and ambiguous; ideally this would lead to divine revelations of a very personal nature."

"We have to look at the paintings of the fifteenth century in the same way.  Like the reality they reproduce, they contain a potential for symbolism that cannot simply be deciphered like a code.  They hold many associative possibilities which can be revealed to the attentive spectator by visual means.  The greater the artist, the more ingenious this mechanism of expressive concealment.  Erwin Panofsky called it 'disguised symbolism' because the phenomenon involves underlying meanings which the representation as such does not immediately evoke.  Owing to an all-too-literary search for symbolic meanings, this conception of the problem has frequently resulted in a system of iconographical explanations which actually detracts from the spirit of visual revelation.  Likewise, we sometimes look for the symbolic significance of objects or scenes because, to our modern eyes, they seem anomalous, or because the symbolism of earlier periods escapes us."

– Dirk de Vos, The Flemish Primitives (Princeton University Press, 2002)

Hugo van der Goes
Adoration of the Shepherds
ca. 1480
oil on panel
Gemäldegalerie, Berlin

Hugo van der Goes
Adoration of the Shepherds (detail)
ca. 1480
oil on panel
Gemäldegalerie, Berlin

Hugo van der Goes
Adoration of the Shepherds (detail)
ca. 1480
oil on panel
Gemäldegalerie, Berlin

Hugo van der Goes
Adoration of the Shepherds (detail)
ca. 1480
oil on panel
Gemäldegalerie, Berlin

Hugo van der Goes
Adoration of the Shepherds (detail)
ca. 1480
oil on panel
Gemäldegalerie, Berlin

attributed to Petrus Christus
St John the Baptist (detail)
ca. 1440
oil on panel
Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio

attributed to Petrus Christus
St John the Baptist
ca. 1440
oil on panel
Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio

Jan van Eyck
Virgin and Child with St Michael Archangel, Donor, and St Catherine
1437
oil on panels (triptych)
Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister, Dresden

Jan van Eyck
Adoration of the Mystic Lamb
(The Ghent Altarpiece)
1432
oil on panels
Cathedral of St Bavo, Ghent