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Died on 06 January 1616: Hans
von Aachen (or Ach), German Mannerist
painter artist born in 1552.
German painter, born in Cologne (in spite of his name, which derives
from his father's birthplace) and active in the Netherlands, Italy (1574-87),
and most notably Prague, where he settled in 1596 as court painter to the
emperor Rudolf II. On Rudolf's death (1612) he worked for the emperor Matthias.
His paintings, featuring elegant, elongated figures, are like those
of his colleague Bartholomeus
Spranger leading examples of the sophisticated Mannerist art
then in vogue at the courts of Northern Europe, and he was particularly
good with playfully erotic nudes (The Triumph of Truth, 1598).
Engravings after his work gave his style wide infiuence and he ranks as
one of the most important German artists of his time.
LINKS
Bacchus, Ceres and Cupid (163x113cm)
Joking
Couple (25x20cm) _ At the end of the 16th century the court of Emperor
Rudolph II in Prague was one of the most important art and cultural centre
of Europe. The Emperor gathered together important artists: painters, sculptors,
goldsmiths, who developed a characteristic style as important as that of
the Fontainebleau school flowered at the same period in France. One component
of the Rudolphean style was the painting of the Flemish Spranger, another
the German Hans von Aachen and the third the Swiss Joseph Heintz. Aachen
studied in Italy, he spent there 14 years and was known as a portraitist.
He went to Munich and worked for the Bavarian Prince. He moved to Prague
in 1592 and became court painter at the court of Rudolph II. In addition
to mythological subjects he painted realistic genre pictures with two-three
figures. |
^
Born on 06 January 1832: Louis
Christophe Paul Gustave Doré, French
Romantic painter, printmaker, etcher, lithographer, and book illustrator,
who died in Paris on 23 January 1883.
Doré was born in Strasbourg. He first made his mark by his
illustrations to Rabelais (1854) and to The Wandering Jew
and Balzac's Contes Drolatiques (1865) [English translation: Droll
Stories]. These are followed by illustrated editions of Dante's
Inferno (1861), the Contes of Perrault and Don Quixote
(1863), the Purgatorio and Paradiso of Dante (1868), the
Bible (1865-66), Paradise Lost (1866), Tennyson's Idylls of
the King (1867-68), La Fontaine's Fables (1867). He also executed
much in color.
Doré was the most popular and successful French book illustrator
of the mid 19th century. Doré became very widely known for his illustrations
to such books as Dante's Inferno (1861), Don Quixote (1862),
and the Bible (1866), and he helped to give European currency to the illustrated
book of large . He was so prolific that at one time he employed more than
forty blockcutters. His work is characterized by a rather naïve but highly
spirited love of the grotesque and represents a commercialization of the
Romantic
taste for the bizarre. Drawings of London done in 1869-71 were more sober
studies of the poorer quarters of the city and captured the attention of
van
Gogh. In the 1870s he also took up painting (doing some large and ambitions
religious works) and sculpture (the monument to the dramatist and novelist
Alexandre Dumas in the Place Malesherbes in Paris, erected in 1883, is his
work).
LINKS
33
Prints at FAMSF Andromeda
Don
Quixote and the Windmill Don
Quixote in his Library Elaine
The Enigma
The Raven
(1884 book with wood engravings 47x37x2cm) The Raven
_ painting based on The Raven
by Edgar Allen Poe. Viviane
and Merlin in a Forest (170x122cm) Jacob
Wrestling with the Angel (1855) Alpine
Scene (1865) Ithuriel
and Zephon Hunt Satan from Milton's Paradise Lost Canto 3
of Paradise from Dante's Divine Comedy Portrait
of François Rabelais, opposite title page in the book Oeuvres
de Rabelais (1873 wood engraving 24x19cm) |
^
Died on 06 January 1974: David
Alfaro Siqueiros, Mexican Social
Realist muralist, painter, born on 29 December 1896, whose art reflects
his Marxist political ideology.
LINKS
Self-Portrait
Siqueiros
por Siqueiros (1930, 99x79cm)
Campesinos
(1913 100x189cm) _ Campesinos embodies the innovating techniques
proposed in the teaching methods of the National Academy of Fine Arts at
the beginning of the 20th century. As part of painters' artistic training,
Alfredo Ramos Martínez established the first Open-Air School of Painting
which allowed students, albeit somewhat belatedly, to more freely explore
Impressionist and post-Impressionist innovations in form, theme and technique.
The works painted there moved visibly away from the teachings of the master,
José María Velasco. Free, rapid brush strokes and a luminous palette characterized
the students' work. Campesinos is one of David Alfaro Siqueiros'
earliest known works as a student at the Academy.
Muerte
y funerales de Caín (1947, 76x93cm) _ In Muerte
y funerales de Caín David Alfaro Siqueiros reveals his interest in
landscape and moves away from political themes. Siquieros' experiments during
that year in landscape painting led him to use an abstract vocabulary and,
as in this case, include unexpected elements in the scene. The dead chicken
that we see is lying between the ordered ranks of workers and soldiers and
a small group on the other side of the divided land. The symbolism is purely
personal in nature and may allude to the Cold War.
Explosión
en la ciudad (1945, 76x61cm) _ The original of this
painting is dated 1935, and is one of the most pre-dated works of the 20th
century. The aerial bombing and the testimony of photo-journalism on the
Spanish Civil War which ended in 1936 was for many artists a visual education
from those who like David Alfaro Siqueiros had seen and lived it. A photograph
by the Mayo brothers preserved in the General Archives of the Nation bears
witness to the date of 1945 for the painting when it was reproduced in the
journal MAS in 1947. In pre-dating Explosión en la ciudad, the
artist attempted to alter history and impose a particular reading on the
work.
Bahía
de Acapulco (1957, 76x94cm) _ David Alfaro Siqueiros
is not known for his landscapes. However, a cursory examination of his easelwork
allows us to conclude that almost 25% of it is landscape painting. The aerial
space and the projects of modernization and development in the 1950's such
as that of the Port of Acapulco impressed the painter. Proof of this is
found in the considerable number of aerial views he painted not only of
the Bay of Acapulco, but more specifically of Puerto Marqués, the place
where the modernizers of the time, members of President Alemán's administration,
built their holiday villas.
Barrancas
(1947, 77x100cm) _ David Alfaro Siqueiros moves away from the picturesque
landscape style and his new mode of vision reveals an approach based on
aerial photography and a photographic camera approach to the surface. He
plays with the optics of planes, dimensions and the textures obtained through
the use of new painting materials, including resins, lacquer and acrylics.
In this way he produces an earthy effect, a vortex effect which by the end
of the decade will lead him to abandon the earth as a point of reference
for perspective, and create a new one from space. Siqueiros manages to paint
masses in such a way as to give them a sculptural appearance, imbuing them
with great force and loading them with excessive weight.
Echo
of a Scream (1937, 122x91cm) _ David Alfaro Siqueiros’s
political activities often overshadowed his artistic endeavors, although
the two went hand in hand: he organized his first protest in 1911 at the
Academia de San Carlos, a traditional art academy where he was a student.
An ardent Communist, Siqueiros organized artist and labor unions and helped
draft a manifesto that called for the creation of monumental public art
rooted in indigenous Mexican artistic traditions and at the service of the
Mexican Revolution, which became the basis for the Mexican mural movement.
He consistently espoused the cause of revolutionary technique and content
that would radicalize the viewer. Several times in the mid-1930s, Siqueiros
traveled to the United States to lecture and work on private commissions.
During a trip to New York in 1936, he established the Siqueiros Experimental
Workshop, which he hoped would initiate a new period of mural painting that
relied on modern technology. Here, he demonstrated his ideas for the use
of photomontage and other unorthodox techniques and encouraged the use of
new synthetic and industrial materials, such as Duco, a transparent automobile
paint. He first used Duco in his murals because it dries rapidly and is
extremely durable. He soon began to use it in works on canvas as well because
of the range of visual effects he could achieve. Siqueiros supported the
activities of his short-lived workshop through the sale of easel paintings
he made there. In these works he felt that he had for the first time successfully
coordinated new formal means and political content. Echo of a Scream
is one of these works. Based on a news photo of a wailing child abandoned
in the ruins of a bombed Manchurian railroad station, the painting presents
a desolate landscape rendered in somber grays and browns. The face of the
child, contorted in a scream of sorrow and rage, is repeated in the center
of the picture on a much larger scale. The disembodied head looms over the
scene, amplifying the child’s heartrending agony. Siqueiros’s use of a photograph
as his source and the repetition of imagery reflects the influence of his
friendship with Soviet film director Sergey Eisenstein, who had introduced
Siqueiros to the concept of using multiple perspectives in order to dramatize
ideological meanings in his work. Siqueiros insisted that his easel paintings
were subordinate to his murals. He felt easel painting was bourgeois and
intellectual, while he aspired to make art that appealed to the ordinary
worker. In fact, his paintings contributed significantly to his international
reputation. Siqueiros’s work differed markedly from the heavy-handed Social
Realism prescribed by specific political agendas; his emphasis on innovative
process and materials reveals his independent approach to Marxist art.
Ethnography
(1939) _ David Alfaro Siqueiros, "El Coronelazo", polemic painter, activist,
indefatigable social fighter, dogmatic up to insanity -we just have to remember
his celebrated phrase "there´s no other route than ours"-; was one of the
three masterfuls of Mexican Muralism along with José Clemente Orozco and
Diego Rivera. His Ethnographic work, is a good sample of the powerful talent
that ran through the veins of Siqueiros; painted after his return to Mexico,
after fighting beside the republicans in the Spanish Civil War, this piece
of art presents the mysterious and powerful image of an indigenous with
the face of an olmec mask. With a colour treatment almost monochromatic,
he uses his accustomed dynamism on the trace of the clothing of the hieratic
character; and with a background almost abstract, the prehispanic mask stands
out when framed by the character´s hat and shirt. That mask, it is said,
was known by David Alfaro Siqueiros inside the collection of William Spratling,
who was an american expatriate residing in Taxco and dedicated to impel
the silver industry, apart from being an excellent collectionist and prehispanic
art merchant. Siqueiros had the first meeting with Spratling when he was
fulfilling a sentence inside the Taxco Prison, in the State of Guerrero;
during his imprisonment, the American became his financial support and a
material provider to carry out his work inside jail. The olmec mask, found
inside a cave in the State of Guerrero on the beginnings of the thirties,
was the motive of this extraordinary work by Siquieros that, without a doubt,
was the most polemic and controverted of the three masterfuls of that time.
Mujer
con rebozo (1949, 97x120cm)
Cabeza
de mujer (1939) La
Colina de los Muertos (1944, 95x69cm) |
^
Died on 06 January 1541 or 1542: Bernaert
(or Barend) van Orley (or Brussel, or Orlich), Flemish artist
born in 1492, 1487, or 1488 [multiple personality?]
He was a painter of religious subjects and portraits and designer
of tapestries and stained glass. He was the leading artist of his day in
Brussels, becoming court painter to Margaret
of Austria, regent of the Netherlands, in 1518 and to her successor
Mary of Hungary in 1532. His work is characterized by the use of ill-digested
Italianate
motifs. There is no evidence that he visited Italy, and his knowledge presumably
came from engravings and from Raphael's
tapestry
cartons, which were in Brussels c.1516-19; he has (very flatteringly)
been called 'the Raphael of the Netherlands'. In 1520, when Dürer visited
the Netherlands, Orley gave a banquet for him, and Dürer drew his portrait.
His best-known work is the turbulent Job altarpiece (1521). As a portraitist
his style was quieter and more thoughtful (Georg
Zelle, 1519). None of van Orley's paintings bears a date later
than 1530; after that time he was chiefly occupied with designing tapestries
and stained-glass windows.
LINKS
Altarpiece
of Sts Thomas and Matthias (1512, 140x180cm) _ A winged altarpiece was
commissioned from the young Orley by the Guild of Stonemasons and Carpenters
for the Église du Sablon in Brussels. The Guild had two patron saints, Thomas
and Matthias and the altarpiece was dedicated to them. The altarpiece was
later dismembered, the central panel being now in Vienna while the two wing
panels in Brussels.
Altarpiece
of Calvary (1534) _ The triptych was commissioned by Margaret of Austria
for the church of Brou (Bourg-en-Bresse). _ The closed
altarpiece represents the coat-of-arms of the Habsburgs of Austria (left),
Portugal (right), Philip II (center), the Dukes of Burgundy (lower left)
and the Bourbons (lower right).
Portrait
of Charles V (1520, 72x52cm) _ The subject of this painting was the
most famous ruler of the sixteenth century. The son of the Castilian King
Philip of Burgundy and Mad Joanna, he ascended the Spanish throne in 1516.
In 1519 he became Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire and for nearly forty
years was the leading figure in European politics. The Habsburg lip is already
visible in this youthful and somewhat idealized portrait. In his later years
the Emperor was also painted several times by Titian, for whom he sat in
Augsburg. Bernaert van Orley, the master of this portrait, was court painter
to the two women regents, Margaret of Austria and her successor, Mary of
Hungary. Orley made a portrait of him in 1515, too, but this painting is
known only from copies.
Haneton
Triptych (centre panel) (87x108cm) _ The center of the triptych offers
Christ's entombment to our contemplation. The Virgin, St John, Mary Magdalene
and the two Maries surround the corpse a few moments before its burial.
Tears stream down their faces like translucent pearls and the brownish shadows
underline their painful expressions. Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus appear
in the rear, awkwardly linked to the group by the presence of the crown
of thorns reminding us that it is they who took Christ down from the cross.
Van Orley has removed the scene from its
historical context, taking out any narrative element, other than a corner
of the stone tomb visible to the bottom right, and focusing attention on
the persons pressed one against another against the gilded background. This
converts the entombment into an act of devotion, continuing the tradition
of the Flemish Primitives. On the other hand, the fluid shapes, the monumental
nature of the figures and certain attitudes point to the influence of Dürer
and of Italian artists. Van Orley, who was also a well-known decorator and
designer of tapestries and stained glass windows, repeats the same composition,
with the addition of a landscape background and the tomb, in a tapestry
conserved at the National Gallery of Art in Washington.
Ancient literary sources tell us that the
work was commissioned from Van Orley by Philippe Haneton around 1520, to
be placed above the family tomb in the church of St Gudule in Brussels.
The donor held high political office, having been appointed first secretary
of the Grand Council by Charles V in 1518, and tasked with judging petitions
for audiences with the emperor. He was also the treasurer of the Order of
the Golden Fleece. He is shown on the left wing, surrounded by his seven
sons. The donor's wife, Marguerite Numan, accompanied by her five daughters,
is shown on the right wing, under the protection of Margaret of Antioch.
When closed the triptych shows the Annunciation painted in grisaille.
_ Haneton
Triptych (wings) (87x48cm) _ Ancient literary sources tell us that the
work was commissioned from Van Orley by Philippe Haneton around 1520, to
be placed above the family tomb in the church of St Gudule in Brussels.
The donor held high political office, having been appointed first secretary
of the Grand Council by Charles V in 1518, and tasked with judging petitions
for audiences with the emperor. He was also the treasurer of the Order of
the Golden Fleece. He is shown on the left wing, surrounded by his seven
sons. Behind him is the silhouette of his patron saint, the apostle Philip,
recognisable by the attribute of his martyrdom, the cross on which he is
supposed to have been crucified head-down. The donor's wife, Marguerite
Numan, accompanied by her five daughters, is shown on the right wing, under
the protection of Margaret of Antioch. This saint's attributes remind the
viewer that she rebuffed the temptation of Satan, who had appeared in the
form of a dragon, by brandishing the cross.
Holy
Family (1522, 90x74cm) _ The infant running to his mother initiates
a diagonal train of movement which leads through Mary to the kindly, ageing
Joseph behind. The grouping of the main figures thus introduces both asymmetry
and depth to the pictorial plane. With great artistic intelligence, Orley
balances this on the left by means of the two angels parallel to the plane,
one approaching with a wicker basket of flowers and one hovering overhead
and bearing a golden crown. Christ serves to link together the various elements
of the painting. His left hand reaches up to his mother's shoulder, his
eyes are raised towards the crown with which he will one day make Mary Queen
of Heaven, while his right arm gestures towards the apple in Joseph's hand
a symbol of the sin which Jesus has come to conquer.
Orley can here be seen as a painter mediating
between two stylistic eras. While lovingly executed details of material
and texture remain the prominent focus of his interest, he also acknowledges
the masters of the High Renaissance in his skilful balancing of depth and
plane and in his delicate gradation of colour in the receding landscape.
Orley is known both as a painter of large altarpieces and as a portraitist.
The
Last Judgment (248x218cm center, 248x94cm side panels) _ The majestic
arched composition, borrowed from Raphael,
the scientific representation of the numerous, animated nude figures, and
the dull, brownish but smooth coloring already point to the strongly Italianate
tendency in the painting of Van Orley.
Portrait
of Margareta van Oostenrijk - Wood Musées Royaux des Beaux-Arts, Brussels
In his own day, van Orley was called the Raphael of the North, which speaks
rather more for Raphael's fame than it does for northern judgment. His principal
patrons were successive Regents of the Netherlands, Margaret of Austria
and Mary of Hungary. Van Orley is at his best in portraits.
Virgin
and Child (1515, 98x71cm) _ The style of this painting is close to that
of Quentin
Massys.
Triptych
of Virtue of Patience (open) (1521, 176x184cm center, 174x80cm each
wing) _ The triptych, which was very likely commissioned by Margaret of
Austria, the governor of the Low Countries, depicts two biblical episodes
illustrating the virtues of patience: the Book of Job and the parable of
Lazarus the beggar and the rich man. Since the Middle Ages it had been common
practice to draw a parallel between the resignation of Job and of Lazarus
in the face of misfortune and the constancy of their faith in God.
On the inside of the triptych, the story
of Job begins on the left wing. Whilst in heaven Satan proposes to God to
test the faith of this wealthy man, the faithful servant of Good, the first
calamities rain down. Job's entire flocks are led off by the Sabeans. On
the central panel, the unleashed forces of evil bring down the palace, killing
Job's sons and daughters. The painter accentuates the dramatic character
of the scene by numerous foreshortenings and obliques, which have the effect
of pushing the picture towards the spectator. In the background countryside
scene, we see Job himself sacrificing to God; to the right, naked and covered
with sores, he is being cursed by his wife. On the right inner wing, Job
has recovered his earlier wealth and descends the steps of his palace towards
his former friends who implore his intercession.
Van Orley creates his masterpiece by marrying
the Flemish tradition with the new directions of Italian art and his own
inventiveness. The result is a veritable profession of faith in the Renaissance,
underlined by the artist's motto, "Elx syne tyt" (each in his time) inscribed
on the pillar to the left of the central panel.
_ Triptych
of Virtue of Patience (closed) (1521, 174x80cm each wing) _ The triptych,
which was very likely commissioned by Margaret of Austria, the governor
of the Low Countries, depicts two biblical episodes illustrating the virtues
of patience: the Book of Job and the parable of Lazarus the beggar and the
rich man. Since the Middle Ages it had been common practice to draw a parallel
between the resignation of Job and of Lazarus in the face of misfortune
and the constancy of their faith in God.
When closed, the triptych depicts the parable
of Lazarus. At the bottom of the wings, divided into three symmetrical registers,
Lazarus is dying at the rich man's gate, whilst the latter suffers eternal
torment. The Italianate pose, and the monumentality and beauty of the nude
are inspired by Raphael. In the centre, the rich man's feast, followed by
his agony, take place in a sumptuous mansion. His wife, bringing him communion,
and the physician, examining his urine, are looking after him whilst, in
hell, two demons are torturing him, presenting him with a chalice writhing
with serpents and a bowl filled with an infernal liquid. At the top, Lazarus'
soul rises up to heaven in the form of a child, first held up by two angels
in a transparent bubble, then in the bosom of Abraham.
Van Orley creates his masterpiece by marrying
the Flemish tradition with the new directions of Italian art and his own
inventiveness. The result is a veritable profession of faith in the Renaissance,
underlined by the artist's motto, "Elx syne tyt" (each in his time) inscribed
on the pillar to the left of the central panel.
Joris
van Zelle (1519, 39x32cm) _ Thanks to the attractive Latin inscription
around the edge of the tapestry ornamenting the back of the painting, we
know the name and profession of the person portrayed. It is Joris van Zelle,
born in 1491 at Leuven where he studied medicine. As early as 1522 he was
appointed physician of the city of Brussels, practising at St John's Hospital
until 1561. He was a neighbour and probably a friend of Bernard van Orley.
Both lived at the Place Saint-Géry, the first at the corner of the Rue de
la Digue, the second opposite the church entrance, and both belonged to
the De Corenbloem rhetoric chamber. Van Zelle died in 1567 and was buried
in the Church of St Gudule, next to his wife, Barbara Spapen. The archives
describe him as a 'medicus celeberrimus".
The portrait renders homage as much to the
humanist as to the bibliophile, surrounded by books that are remarkable
for their precious bindings. The 32 works from his library, which are conserved
to this day in Augsburg, most of them medical treatises, are elegantly and
expensively bound. Wearing a felt hat and a fur-lined coat, the young 28-year
old practitioner is taking notes, with his ink-well and quill-case hanging
behind him. The significance of the joined hands and the ANVTEFQS monogram
decorating the tapestry remain unclarified until this day. Do they allude
to the understanding between the artist and his model? This has been suggested,
but the mystery remains. Psychological depth is not the primary quality
of this portrait.
We remain surprised by the physician's slightly
lifeless face. The artist carefully and realistically renders the strong-boned
nose and firmly-drawn mouth, but fails to capture the feelings, intelligence
or erudition of his subject. On the other hand, Van Orley renders almost
palpable the warm, limited space surrounding the physician and reflects
so well the humanist atmosphere that one feels that one has been admitted
into Dr Van Zelle's wainscoted cabinet, as his painter friend probably was.
The lively interaction of warm and delicately-shaded reds, greens and browns,
the careful painting of the materials, with the viewer immediately able
to sense the differences in texture, and the tight framing, all strengthen
the sense of intimacy between the sitter and the viewer. |
Died on a 06 January:
1952 Charles Ginner, British artist born in 1878.
1961 Alfrewd Aaron Wolmark, Polish British artist born on 28
December 1877.
1885 Emily (Coppin) Stannard, British artist born in 1803.
1866 Paul Emil Jacobs, Danish artist born on 18 August 1802.
1840 Charles Town (or Towne), British artist born in 1763. [Could
there be any Charles Town Charleston paintings?] Relative? of Francis
Towne [1739-1816]?
1821 Charles François Nivard, French artist born on 22
April 1739. [Je ne trouve Nivard ni Vard dans l'internet.]
1750 Georg Liszewski, Polish artist born in 1674.
Born on a 06 January:
1889 Louis Ritman, US Impressionist
painter who died in 1963. [Say what you want, but he was always the Ritman for
the job.] LINKS
Lady by the
Window (1918)
1857 Robert Thegerström, Swedish artist who died on 09 August
1919. [I can find neither Thegerström nor the Gerström on the
internet.]
1681 Balthasar van den Bossche, Flemish artist who died on 08
September 1715. Relative? of Aert van den Bossche?
|