ART “4” “2”-DAY  18 JUNE
VAN DER WEYDEN ANNEX

VARIOUS PAINTINGS
Died on 18 June 1464: Rogier de la Pasture van der Weyden, Flemish Northern Renaissance painter born in 1399 or 1400.
BIOGRAPHY
Extensive coverage with commentaries and links to reproductions, in whole and in many details, of:
Deposition
Saint Luke Madonna
Annunciation Triptych
Miraflores Altarpiece
Seven Sacraments Altarpiece
Crucifixion Altarpiece
Bladelin Triptych
Last Judgment Polyptych
Braque Family Triptych
Saint Columba Altarpiece
Saint John Altarpiece
Other altarpieces
Other Crucifixions
Portraits
Other paintings (here)

^ == Various Paintings

Various single panels

Dream of Pope Sergius (1440, 89x80cm)

Exhumation of St Hubert (1440, 88x81cm)

Virgin and Child (Durán Madonna) (1440, 100x52cm)

Visitation (1445, 57x36cm)

Miniature from the first page of the Chroniques de Hainaut (1448)

Saint Jerome and the Lion (1450, 31x25cm)

Virgin with the Child and Four Saints (1451) , 62x46cm)

Virgin and Child (after 1454, 32x23cm)


Fragments and copies of lost paintings


The Magdalene Reading (1445, 62x55cm) _ Parallels can be found in Campin's work for setting sacred scenes in contemporary domestic interiors like the one depicted here. This beautiful figure seated on a cushion reading a devotional book can be identified as Mary Magdalene by the jar at her side, in reference to the ointment with which she anointed Christ's feet (Luke 7:37-8). When the painting was cleaned in 1956 it was discovered that its dark uniform background, applied probably in the nineteenth century, had concealed the body of Saint Joseph holding a rosary, part of a window with a landscape view, and the foot and crimson drapery of another figure, identified as Saint John the Evangelist by reference to a late fifteenth-century drawing of a similar composition showing the Virgin and Child surrounded by saints. The altarpiece from which this picture was cut has been partially reconstructed with the help of that drawing and two other surviving fragments, one of them the head of Saint Joseph and the other the head of a female saint. The whole picture is estimated to have been about one meter high and one and a half or more meters wide. Van der Weyden's mastery of exquisitely painted naturalistic detail is as apparent here in the nailheads of the floor and Joseph's crystal rosary beads as it is in the gold brocade of the Magdalen's underskirt. In later paintings, however, he combined realistic details with the expression of intense pathos or deep piety, in contrast to his ever-impassive older contemporary, Jan van Eyck. The panel depicting Mary Magdalene was sawn out of a large altarpiece. The figure of the saint - very reminiscent of the figure of St Barbara in the Werl Altarpiece, and probably deriving from the same model - is extremely well painted; her delicate face, in its detailed elaboration and expression, is close to that of St Veronica on the right wing of the Crucifixion Triptych. But the floor and the cupboard behind Mary Magdalene, much too narrow and papery in effect, are insubstantial and uninspired. This weakness is particularly clear if we compare the jar of ointment held by the saint with the same attribute in other pictures by Rogier. It is unlikely that Rogier was deliberately trying to create abstract effects in his figures, to match a striking effect of reduction in the general structure of their surroundings. Earlier and later works alike show no such simplification. More probably, he delegated the execution of less important parts of the picture to his assistants in both the Crucifixion Triptych and the altarpiece to which the Mary Magdalene once belonged. Many figures in the mutilated altarpiece were obviously by another painter.

St Joseph (1445, 21x18cm) _ This fragment was sawn out of the same large altarpiece as the Mary Magdalene in the National Gallery, London. The aged Joseph stood behind the Magdalene; the lower part of his body can still be seen in the fragment. The exterior of the building in which the scene took place was richly ornamented with Gothic decoration, like a church.

St Catherine (1445, 22x19cm)

Group of Men (1460, 50x32cm)

Portrait of a Man (1450, 75x50cm)

Isabella of Portugal (1500, 47x38cm)

Portrait of Philip the Good (1520, 29x21cm)

AT ART “4” “2”-DAY  18 JUNE
DEATHS:  1865 WIERTZ 1464 VAN DER WEYDEN BIOGRAPHY
BIRTH: 1621 EVERDINGEN
TO THE TOP
ART “4”  ...JUN 18       |||      HISTORY “4” ...JUN 18   ...ANY DAY       |||      ALTERNATE SITES
http://www.safran-arts.com/42day/art/art4jun/weyden/other.html
updated Tuesday 17-Jun-2003 21:35 UT