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Mannerism - I 

Mannerism

Mannerism is a style in European art that emerged in the later years of the Italian High Renaissance around 1520, spreading by about 1530 and lasting until about the end of the 16th century in Italy, when the Baroque style largely replaced it. Northern Mannerism continued into the early 17th century.

Mannerism encompasses a variety of approaches influenced by, and reacting to, the harmonious ideals associated with artists such as Leonardo da Vinci, Raphael, Vasari, and early Michelangelo. Where High Renaissance art emphasizes proportion, balance, and ideal beauty, Mannerism exaggerates such qualities, often resulting in compositions that are asymmetrical or unnaturally elegant. Notable for its artificial (as opposed to naturalistic) qualities, this artistic style privileges compositional tension and instability rather than the balance and clarity of earlier Renaissance painting. Mannerism in literature and music is notable for its highly florid style and intellectual sophistication.


The word "Mannerism" derives from the Italian maniera, meaning "style" or "manner". Like the English word "style", maniera can either indicate a specific type of style (a beautiful style, an abrasive style) or indicate an absolute that needs no qualification (someone "has style"). In the second edition of his Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects (1568), Giorgio Vasari used maniera in three different contexts: to discuss an artist's manner or method of working; to describe a personal or group style, such as the term maniera greca to refer to the medieval Italo-Byzantine style or simply to the maniera of Michelangelo; and to affirm a positive judgment of artistic quality. Vasari was also a Mannerist artist, and he described the period in which he worked as "la maniera moderna", or the "modern style". James V. Mirollo describes how "bella maniera" poets attempted to surpass in virtuosity the sonnets of Petrarch.[13] This notion of "bella maniera" suggests that artists who were thus inspired looked to copying and bettering their predecessors, rather than confronting nature directly. In essence, "bella maniera" utilized the best from a number of source materials, synthesizing it into something new.

As a stylistic label, "Mannerism" is not easily defined. It was used by Swiss historian Jacob Burckhardt and popularized by German art historians in the early 20th century to categorize the seemingly uncategorizable art of the Italian 16th century—art that was no longer found to exhibit the harmonious and rational approaches associated with the High Renaissance. "High Renaissance" connoted a period distinguished by harmony, grandeur and the revival of classical antiquity. The term "Mannerist" was redefined in 1967 by John Shearman following the exhibition of Mannerist paintings organised by Fritz Grossmann at Manchester City Art Gallery in 1965.

Yet historians differ as to whether Mannerism is a style, a movement, or a period. Some authors have called it "Late Renaissance". Although the term remains controversial, it is still commonly used to identify European art and culture in the 16th century.


 

Jan Sanders van Hemessen
c. 1500 – c. 1566

Jan Sanders van Hemessen (c. 1500 – c. 1566) was a leading Flemish Renaissance painter, belonging to the group of Italianizing Flemish painters called the Romanists, who were influenced by Italian Renaissance painting. Van Hemessen had visited Italy during the 1520s, and also Fontainebleau near Paris in the mid 1530s, where he was able to view the work of the colony of Italian artists known as the First School of Fontainebleau, who were working on the decorations for the Palace of Fontainebleau. Van Hemessen's works show his ability to interpret the Italian models into a new Flemish visual vocabulary.

Hemessen played an important role in the development of genre painting, through his large scenes with religious or worldly subjects, set in towns with contemporary dress and architecture. These works depict human failings such as greed and vanity, and some show an interest in subjects with a financial angle. His genre scenes develop the "Mannerist inversion" later taken further by Pieter Aertsen, where a small religious scene in the background reveals the true meaning of the painting, which is dominated by a large foreground scene seemingly devoted to a secular genre subject. One of his best known works, the Parable of the Prodigal Son, expresses a religious theme through a pure genre painting set in a tavern and can be regarded as an important early statement of the merry company tradition. He also painted a small number of portraits, some of exceptional quality, influenced by Bronzino. Van Hemessen was also known for his large nude figures, a subject matter that he had familiarised himself with in Italy.

He was based in Antwerp between 1519 and 1550, joining the artist's Guild of Saint Luke there in 1524. After 1550 he may have moved to Haarlem. He painted several religious subjects, and many others may have been destroyed in the Beeldenstorm that swept through Antwerp in the year of his death.


 

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Allegorical Scene
c. 1550

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Christ Carrying the Cross
1553

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Merry Company
c. 1540

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The Descent from the Cross

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Isaac Blessing Jacob

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Judith
1540

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The Lamentation of Christ

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Portrait of a Man
1540-45

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The Prodigal Son
1536

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St Jerome
1548

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St Jerome
 

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St Jerome
1543

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The Surgeon
c. 1555

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Tobias Restores his Father's Sight
1555

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Virgin and Child

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Virgin and Child beneath a Vine
1528-29

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Woman Weighing Gold

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Vanitas
1550

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Maria Magdalene with a lute, in the background Christ at Martha's house,
1550

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The Parable of the Unmerciful Servant,
c. 1556

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Loose Company
1550

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The Calling of Saint Matthew
c. 1548

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Portrait of a Gentleman, Aged 34, before an Extensive Landscape
1540

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Loose Company
1543

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Tearful Bride

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Tarquin et Lucretia



 

Paris Bordone
1500 – 1571

Paris Bordone (Paris Paschalinus Bordone; 5 July 1500 – 19 January 1571) was an Italian painter of the Venetian Renaissance who, despite training with Titian, maintained a strand of Mannerist complexity and provincial vigor.
Bordone was born in Treviso, but had moved to Venice by late adolescence. He apprenticed briefly and unhappily (according to Vasari) with Titian. Vasari may have met the elder Bordone.

Bordone's works of the 1520s include the Holy Family in Florence, Sacra Conversazione with Donor (Glasgow), and Holy Family with St. Catherine (Hermitage Museum). The St. Ambrose and a Donor (1523) is now in the Pinacoteca di Brera. In 1525–26, Bordone painted an altarpiece for the church of S. Agostino in Crema, a Madonna with St. Christopher and St George (now in the Palazzo Tadini collection at Lovere). A second altarpiece, Pentecost, is also in the Pinacoteca di Brera.
In 1534–35, he painted his large-scale masterpiece for the Scuola di San Marco a canvas of The Fisherman Presenting the Ring to Doge Gradenigo (Accademia). However, comparison between this latter painting and the near-contemporary, and structurally similar, Presentation of the Virgin[2] reveals Bordone's limitations, his use of superior perspective which creates dwarfed distant perspectives, and limited coloration relative to the brilliant tints of Titian.

Bordone also painted smaller cabinet pieces, showing half-figures, semi-undressed men and women from mythology or religious stories in a muscular interaction despite the crowded space. He frequently combined portraiture with allegory.

Paris Bordone subsequently executed many important mural paintings in Venice, Treviso and Vicenza, all of which have perished. In 1538 he was invited to France by Francis I, at whose court he painted many portraits, though no trace of them is to be found in French collections, the two portraits at the Louvre being later acquisitions. On his return journey he also worked for the Fugger palace at Augsburg, but again the works have been lost.


 

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Allegory with Lovers
1550

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Allegory (Venus, Flora, Mars and Cupid)
1558-60

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Annunciation
c. 1555

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Bathsheba Bathing
c. 1549

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Rest on the Flight into Egypt with St Catherine and Angels
1527-30

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Sleeping Venus with Cupid
c. 1540

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Venus and Mars with Cupid
1559-60

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The Venetian Lovers
1525-30

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Venus and Cupid
1540s

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Portrait of a Young Woman
1540s

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Young Woman at Her Toilet
c. 1550

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Jupiter and Io
1550

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Flora

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The Rape of Proserpina

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Athena Scorning the Advances of Hephaestus
1554

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Portrait of a young woman
ca 1543-1550

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Reclining Nude
c. 1537-38

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Neptune and Amphitrite

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Allegory of Vanity

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Perseus Armed by Mercury and Minerva

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Bathsheba

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Mars and Venus, Volcano surprise
1548-50

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A Pair of Lovers

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Woman with a green coat

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Portrait of a young Woman

 

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three people with a baby



 

Parmigianino
1503 – 1540

Girolamo Francesco Maria Mazzola (11 January 1503 – 24 August 1540), also known as Francesco Mazzola or, more commonly, as Parmigianino, was an Italian Mannerist painter and printmaker active in Florence, Rome, Bologna, and his native city of Parma. His work is characterized by a "refined sensuality" and often elongation of forms and includes Vision of Saint Jerome (1527) and the iconic if somewhat anomalous Madonna with the Long Neck (1534), and he remains the best known artist of the first generation whose whole careers fall into the Mannerist period.

His prodigious and individual talent has always been recognised, but his career was disrupted by war, especially the Sack of Rome in 1527, three years after he moved there, and then ended by his death at 37. He produced outstanding drawings, and was one of the first Italian painters to experiment with printmaking himself. While his portable works have always been keenly collected and are now in major museums in Italy and around the world, his two large projects in fresco are in a church in Parma and a palace in a small town nearby. This in conjunction with their lack of large main subjects has resulted in their being less well known than other works by similar artists. He painted a number of important portraits, leading a trend in Italy towards the three-quarters or full-length figure, previously mostly reserved for royalty.


 

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Parmigianino
Self-Portrait in a Convex Mirror
c. 1524

 

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Portrait of a Young Lady
c. 1535

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The Conversion of St Paul

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Cupid
1523-24

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Rest on the Flight to Egypt
1524

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Gian Galeazzo Sanvitale, Count of Fontanellato
1524

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Madonna dal Collo Lungo (Madonna with Long Neck)
1534-40

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Madonna and Child with Saints
1531-33

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Turkish Slave Girl
c. 1530-1534

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Pallas Athene
c. 1539

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Portrait of a Man
1528-30

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Virgin and Child with an Angel
c. 1523

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The Mystic Marriage of St. Catherine

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The Vision of St. Jerome

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Portrait of Francesco Mazzola

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The Madonna with the rose

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Carlo V come dominatore del mondo
1530



 

Bronzino
1503  - 1572

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Agnolo di Cosimo (17 November 1503 – 23 November 1572), usually known as Bronzino (Italian: Il Bronzino) or Agnolo Bronzino, was an Italian Mannerist painter from Florence. His sobriquet, Bronzino, may refer to his relatively dark skin or reddish hair.

He lived all his life in Florence, and from his late 30s was kept busy as the court painter of Cosimo I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany. He was mainly a portraitist but also painted many religious subjects, and a few allegorical subjects, which include what is probably his best-known work, Venus, Cupid, Folly and Time, c. 1544–45, now in London. Many portraits of the Medicis exist in several versions with varying degrees of participation by Bronzino himself, as Cosimo was a pioneer of the copied portrait sent as a diplomatic gift.

He trained with Pontormo, the leading Florentine painter of the first generation of Mannerism, and his style was greatly influenced by him, but his elegant and somewhat elongated figures always appear calm and somewhat reserved, lacking the agitation and emotion of those by his teacher. They have often been found cold and artificial, and his reputation suffered from the general critical disfavour attached to Mannerism in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Recent decades have been more appreciative of his art.

 

BRONZINO

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Venus, Cupid, Folly and Time,
c. 1544–45

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Eleonora di Toledo col figlio Giovanni,
1544–45

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Portrait of a Young Man, c. 1550–55

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The Holy Family with the Infant Saint John the Baptist (Madonna Stroganoff)

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Lodovico Capponi
1550

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Pietà,
1530

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Saint Sebastian,
1533

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Andrea Doria as Neptune,
1550–55

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Portrait of Eleonora of Toledo,
c. 1539

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Portrait of Bartolomeo Panciatichi,
c. 1540

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Portrait of Laura Battiferri,
1555–60

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Holy Family with St. Anne and the Infant St. John,
1545

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Portrait of Bia de' Medici,
1545

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Portrait of a Man Holding a Statuette,
1545

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Sacra famiglia Panciatichi or Madonna Panciatichi,
1545

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Portrait of Stefano Colonna,
1546

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Portrait Cosimo I de' Medici in armour,
c. 1545

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Ugolino Martelli,
c. 1537

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Portrait of Cosimo I de' Medici as Orpheus,
c. 1537–39

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Venus, Cupid and Envy,
c. 1548–50

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John the Baptist,
1553

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Deposition of Christ,
1540–45

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Allegory of Happiness
1564

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Pygmalion and Galatea
1529-32

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Venus, Cupid and Satyr
c. 1555



 

Francesco Primaticcio 
1504 – 1570

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Francesco Primaticcio (April 30, 1504 – 1570) was an Italian Mannerist painter, architect and sculptor who spent most of his career in France.
Born in Bologna, he trained under Giulio Romano in Mantua and became a pupil of Innocenzo da Imola, executing decorations at the Palazzo Te before securing a position in the court of Francis I of France in 1532.
Together with Rosso Fiorentino he was one of the leading artists to work at the Chateau Fontainebleau (where he is grouped with the so-called "First School of Fontainebleau") spending much of his life there. Following Rosso's death in 1540, Primaticcio took control of the artistic direction at Fontainebleau, furnishing the painters and stuccators of his team, such as Nicolò dell'Abate, with designs. He made cartoons for tapestry-weavers and, like all 16th-century court artists, was called upon to design elaborate ephemeral decorations for masques and fêtes, which survive only in preparatory drawings and, sometimes, engravings. Francis I trusted his eye and sent him back to Italy on buying trips in 1540 and again in 1545.

In Rome, part of Primaticcio's commission was to take casts of the best Roman sculptures in the papal collections, some of which were cast in bronze to decorate the parterres at Fontainebleau.

Primaticcio retained his position as court painter to Francis' heirs, Henry II and Francis II. His masterpiece, the Salle d'Hercule at Fontainebleau, occupied him and his team from the 1530s to 1559.

Primaticcio's crowded Mannerist compositions and his long-legged canon of beauty influenced French art for the rest of the century.

Primaticcio turned to architecture towards the end of his life, his greatest work being the Valois Chapel at the Abbey of Saint-Denis, although this was not completed until after his death and was destroyed in 1719.


 

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Ulysses and Penelope
c. 1545

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The Rape of Helene
1530-39

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Holy Family with St Elizabeth and John the Baptist
1541

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Alexander tames Bucephalus

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The Judgment of Midas

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The Art Of music
(Ca. 1565)

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Ulysses and Penelope, 1563

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Bagno di Pallade
La Galleria di Francesco

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Cleobi e Bitone
La Galleria di Francesco

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Elefante reale
La Galleria di Francesco

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Morte di Adone
La Galleria di Francesco

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Hercules, Bacchus, Pan, and Saturn
1560

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Ceres Seated on Clouds with Two Goddesses and Two Putt
1560

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Pluto, Neptune, Minerva and Apollo
1560

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Venus and Cupid, Two Other Goddesses, and a Putto
1560

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Vulcan and the Cyclopes Forging Arrows

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Young Man Drinking Water (Rebecca and Eliezer)

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Blinding of Polyphemus

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Trojan Horse



 

Pieter Aertsen
1508 – 1575

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Pieter Aertsen (1508, Amsterdam – 2 June 1575, Amsterdam), called Lange Piet ("Tall Pete") because of his height, was a Dutch painter in the style of Northern Mannerism. He is credited with the invention of the monumental genre scene, which combines still life and genre painting and often also includes a biblical scene in the background. He was active in his native city Amsterdam but also worked for a long period in Antwerp, then the centre of artistic life in the Netherlands.

His genre scenes were influential on later Flemish Baroque painting, Dutch still life painting and also in Italy. His peasant scenes preceded by a few years the much better-known paintings produced in Antwerp by Pieter Bruegel the Elder.


 

Aersten

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Christ and the Adulteress
1557-58

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Christ and the Adulteress
1559

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Christ in the House of Martha and Mary

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The Egg Dance
1552

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The Fat Kitchen. An Allegory
1565-75

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Market Scene
1560-65

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Market Woman with Vegetable Stall
1567

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A Meat Stall with the Holy Family Giving Alms,
1551

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Peasants by the Hearth
1560s

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The Pancake Bakery

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Peasants Meal
after 1566

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Peasant Feast
1550

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Vanitas Still-Life
1552

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Market Scene,
1569

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Vendor of Fowl
1560s

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Triptych with the Adoration of the Magi (central panel)
c. 1560



 

Jan Matsys
c.1510 - 1575

Jan Massijs or Jan Matsys (c.1510 – 8 October 1575) was a Flemish Renaissance painter known for his history paintings, genre scenes and landscapes. He also gained a reputation as a painter of the female nude, which he painted with a sensuality reminiscent of the school of Fontainebleau.
He was born in Antwerp, the son of leading Antwerp painter Quinten Matsys and the older brother of Cornelis, who became a painter and engraver. He trained under his father. He was admitted, together with his brother Cornelis, as a master in the Antwerp Guild of St. Luke in 1531, a year after their father's death. It is assumed that he left Antwerp immediately thereafter and worked for a while in Fontainebleau, but these facts are not firmly established. He was back in Antwerp by 1536. He married his cousin Anna van Tuylt in 1538. The couple had three children.
In 1544 Jan and his brother Cornelis were banned from Antwerp because of their religious beliefs. It is possible that Jan went to Fontainebleau and Germany. It is certain that he spent time in Genoa. He returned to Antwerp before the end of 1555 when the ban imposed on him was ended. He was then involved in a number of court cases with his brothers and sisters over the distribution of inheritances.

He had been sufficiently rehabilitated for the local city council to commission several works from him. These works were destroyed in 1576 when Spanish troops set the city hall on fire during the Spanish Fury and the Sack of Antwerp. Jan Massijs had died the year before, in Antwerp, having been reduced to a state bordering on poverty. His son Quentin had become a master of the Guild of St. Luke in 1574 and died in Frankfurt in 1589. Jan's daughter Susan emigrated to Italy. It is assumed that Jan's children left Antwerp for religious reasons.

His known pupils are Frans van Tuylt (in 1536), Frans de Witte (in 1543) and Olivier de Cuyper (in 1569).


 

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A merry company
1563

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The Apocalypse of Saint John the Evangelist,
1563

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Flora,
1559

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The Ill-matched Pair,
1566

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At the tax office
1539

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Maria Magdalena
1571

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Venus Cythereia
1561

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Pieta

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David och Batseba 
1562

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Judyta med Holofernes huvud
ca.1575

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Bathsheba observerad av kung David

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Den heliga familje
1563

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The Healing of Tobit
ca.1550

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Hos uppbördsmannen (fogde)

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Det glada sällskapet

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Lot med döttrar
1565

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Lot med döttrar
 

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Susanna och de äldre
1567

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Charity

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Holy Virgin and Child
1564

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Susannah and the Elders

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Cleopatra 

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Mary Magdalene en Prayer 

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Judith

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Merry Company,
1562

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Charity,
1544-58

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