Category:Antwerp-Baltimore Quadriptych
One of the earliest paintings of the Netherlandish school | |||||
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English: A small, folding altarpiece of which one half (the Annunciation, Baptism of Christ, Crucifixion) belongs to the Walters Art Museum, Baltimore, and the other (the Nativity, Resurrection, Saint Christopher) to the Museum Mayer van den Bergh, Antwerp.
This extremely important masterpiece is one of the earliest paintings of the Netherlandish school. The style suggests that the artist came from Guelders, in the northern Netherlands, as did the famous Limbourg brothers, who settled in Paris. The overall theme of the six scenes--Annunciation, Nativity, Crucifixion, Resurrection, Baptism, Saint Christopher--is the divinity of Christ and the certainty of salvation. It is one of the earliest works where we find evidence of oil paint, a medium that, through its translucency, helps to bring out the richness and vibrancy of details from nature, such as the fish swimming in the Jordan River. The realism for which 15th-century Northern European painting is known is evident in the close attention paid to describing nature with such detail. The altarpiece can be traced back to the Carthusian monastery of Champmol near Dijon, France, founded by Philip the Bold (1342-1404), Duke of Burgundy, and surely was made for Philip to take on his travels.[1]
Media in category "Antwerp-Baltimore Quadriptych"
The following 11 files are in this category, out of 11 total.
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15th-century unknown painters - St Christopher - WGA23558.jpg 730 × 1,138; 194 KB
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Onbekend - Geboorte van Jezus.jpg 2,450 × 3,506; 3.73 MB
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Unknown painter - Nativity - WGA23557.jpg 760 × 1,161; 162 KB
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Unknown painter - Resurrection - WGA23559.jpg 770 × 1,164; 155 KB