netherlandish$514181$ - traducción al griego
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netherlandish$514181$ - traducción al griego

WORK OF ARTISTS ACTIVE IN THE LOW COUNTRIES DURING THE 15TH- AND 16TH-CENTURY NORTHERN RENAISSANCE
Flemisch Primitive; French Primitives; Flemish Primitives; Early Netherlandish Painting; Late Gothic painting; Flemish primitives; Early Netherlandish art; Flemish primatives; Early Netherlandish; Early Netherlandish painter; Early netherlandish painting; Early Netherlandish artist; Ars nova (art); Early Nertherlandish; Flemish school; Early Dutch painting; Early Flemish painting; Early Netherlandish paintings; Hispano-Flemish painting; List of Early Netherlandish painters; List of Early Netherlandish Painters; Flemish Primitive
  • The Entombment]]'', c.&nbsp;1440–55 ([[National Gallery]], London), is an austere but affecting portrayal of sorrow and grief, and one of the few surviving 15th-century glue-size paintings.<ref>Campbell (1998), 39–41</ref>
  • Limbourg brothers, ''The Death of Christ'', folio 153r, [[Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry]]
  • date=2016-03-03 }}</ref>
  • The ''Ghent Altarpiece'' during technical analysis in [[Saint Bavo's Cathedral]]
  • conservation]] work on these panels in the 1950s led to advances in methodology and technical application<ref name="Chapuis 1998, 13" />
  • Master of Girart de Roussillon, c.&nbsp;1450, Burgundian wedding (Philip the Good and Isabella of Portugal). [[Austrian National Library]], Vienna
  • Virgin and Child with Two Angels]]'', c. 1480. [[Uffizi]], Florence
  • [[Hieronymus Bosch]], ''[[The Hermit Saints]]'', c.&nbsp;1493. [[Doge's Palace, Venice]]
  • [[Hugo van der Goes]], detail from the ''[[Portinari Altarpiece]]'', c.&nbsp;1475. [[Uffizi]], Florence
  • [[Hugo van der Goes]], ''Portrait of a Man'', c.&nbsp;1480. [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]], New York
  • Van der Weyden's ''[[Beaune Altarpiece]]'' held under low light and with the panels split so that both sides can be displayed simultaneously<ref>Campbell (2004), 74</ref>
  • Rogier van der Weyden, ''[[Jean Wauquelin presenting his 'Chroniques de Hainaut' to Philip the Good]]'', presentation miniature, 1447–1448. [[Royal Library of Belgium]], Brussels
  • Detail from Jan van Eyck's ''[[Crucifixion and Last Judgement diptych]]''. Christ and thief before a view of Jerusalem, c.&nbsp;1430. [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]], New York. The Crucifixion panel in this diptych is framed within an azure sky against a distant view of [[Jerusalem]].
  • Jan van Eyck, ''[[Madonna of Chancellor Rolin]]'', c. 1435
  • The ''[[Ghent Altarpiece]]'', completed in 1432 by Hubert and Jan van Eyck. This polyptych and the [[Turin-Milan Hours]] are generally seen as the first major works of the Early Netherlandish period.
  • [[Barthélemy d'Eyck]]'s chivalrous and romantic leaf from his "Livre du cœur d'Amour épris", c.&nbsp;1458–1460
  • [[Master of the Life of the Virgin]], a late Gothic ''Annunciation'', c.&nbsp;1463–1490. [[Alte Pinakothek]], Munich
  • [[Pieter Bruegel the Elder]], ''[[The Hunters in the Snow]]'', 1565. [[Kunsthistorisches Museum]], Vienna. The most famous of Bruegel's several winter landscapes, the panel is indicative of how painting in the mid-16th century tended towards the secular and everyday life.
  • Portrait of a Lady]]'', 1460. [[National Gallery of Art]], Washington. Van der Weyden moved portraiture away from idealisation and towards more naturalistic representation.<ref name="V76">Van Der Elst (1944), 76</ref>
  • [[Dieric Bouts]], ''[[Mater Dolorosa]]/[[Ecce Homo]]'', after 1450, a rare surviving diptych with intact frame and hinges
  • Unknown Flemish weaver, ''Tapestry with Scenes from the Passion of Christ'', c.&nbsp;1470–90. Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam
  • Rogier van der Weyden, ''[[Braque Triptych]]'', c.&nbsp;1452. Oil on oak panels. [[Musée du Louvre]], Paris. This triptych is noted for the floating "speech" inscriptions and the continuous landscape uniting the panels.<ref>Campbell (2004), 89</ref>
  • [[Hieronymus Bosch]], ''[[The Garden of Earthly Delights]]'', c.&nbsp;1490–1510. [[Museo del Prado]], Madrid. Art historians are divided as to whether the central panel was intended as a moral warning or as a panorama of paradise lost.
  • Rogier van der Weyden, ''[[The Magdalen Reading]]'', before 1438. [[National Gallery]], London. This fragment is unusually rich in iconographical detail, including the Magdalen's averted eyes, her attribute of ointment, and the concept of Christ as the word represented by the book in her hands.<ref>Campbell (1998), 392–405</ref>
  • "The Mystic Capture of the Unicorn", fragment from ''[[The Hunt of the Unicorn]]'', 1495–1505. [[The Cloisters]], New York
  • Gerard David, ''Marriage at Cana'', c.&nbsp;1500. [[Musée du Louvre]], Paris. This work was first publicly displayed in 1802, attributed to van Eyck. Art historians in the 19th century were preoccupied with the difficulties of attribution.
  • The Descent from the Cross]]'', c.&nbsp;1435, [[Museo del Prado]], Madrid

netherlandish      
adj. ολλαντζέζος

Wikipedia

Early Netherlandish painting

Early Netherlandish painting, traditionally known as the Flemish Primitives, refers to the work of artists active in the Burgundian and Habsburg Netherlands during the 15th- and 16th-century Northern Renaissance period. It flourished especially in the cities of Bruges, Ghent, Mechelen, Leuven, Tournai and Brussels, all in present-day Belgium. The period begins approximately with Robert Campin and Jan van Eyck in the 1420s and lasts at least until the death of Gerard David in 1523, although many scholars extend it to the start of the Dutch Revolt in 1566 or 1568–Max J. Friedländer's acclaimed surveys run through Pieter Bruegel the Elder. Early Netherlandish painting coincides with the Early and High Italian Renaissance, but the early period (until about 1500) is seen as an independent artistic evolution, separate from the Renaissance humanism that characterised developments in Italy. Beginning in the 1490s, as increasing numbers of Netherlandish and other Northern painters traveled to Italy, Renaissance ideals and painting styles were incorporated into northern painting. As a result, Early Netherlandish painters are often categorised as belonging to both the Northern Renaissance and the Late or International Gothic.

The major Netherlandish painters include Campin, van Eyck, Rogier van der Weyden, Dieric Bouts, Petrus Christus, Hans Memling, Hugo van der Goes and Hieronymus Bosch. These artists made significant advances in natural representation and illusionism, and their work typically features complex iconography. Their subjects are usually religious scenes or small portraits, with narrative painting or mythological subjects being relatively rare. Landscape is often richly described but relegated as a background detail before the early 16th century. The painted works are generally oil on panel, either as single works or more complex portable or fixed altarpieces in the form of diptychs, triptychs or polyptychs. The period is also noted for its sculpture, tapestries, illuminated manuscripts, stained glass and carved retables.

The first generations of artists were active during the height of Burgundian influence in Europe, when the Low Countries became the political and economic centre of Northern Europe, noted for its crafts and luxury goods. Assisted by the workshop system, panels and a variety of crafts were sold to foreign princes or merchants through private engagement or market stalls. A majority of the works were destroyed during waves of iconoclasm in the 16th and 17th centuries; today only a few thousand examples survive.

Early northern art in general was not well regarded from the early 17th to the mid-19th century, and the painters and their works were not well documented until the mid-19th century. Art historians spent almost another century determining attributions, studying iconography, and establishing bare outlines of even the major artists' lives; attribution of some of the most significant works is still debated. Scholarship of Early Netherlandish painting was one of the main activities of 19th- and 20th-century art history, and a major focus of two of the most important art historians of the 20th century: Max J. Friedländer (From Van Eyck to Breugel and Early Netherlandish Painting) and Erwin Panofsky (Early Netherlandish Painting).