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John Oliver Hand, J. Richard Judson, William W. Robinson, Martha Wolff. The Age of Bruegel: Netherlandish Drawings in the Sixteenth Century. Washington / Cambridge, National Gallery of Art / Cambridge University Press, 1986.
€ 20.00
Softcover, xii+339pp., 24x30cm., richly illustr. in b/w., in good condition (covers with light traces of use, spine slightly folded, some foxing on the upside of the book, interior in very good condition). ISBN: 0894680951.
Itemnummer 18391
The complexity and variety of sixteenth-century Netherlandish art endow it with a particular dynamism. It was in the sixteenth century that drawing attained an independent status as an art in itself, distinct from painting; landscape increasingly became a separate genre; and artists consciously referred to the great masters of the past, showing the tremendous influence of Italian art in their own works. This volume documents the unique qualities of the art of drawing during the age of Bruegel. Designed to accompany an exhibition at the National Gallery of Art and The Pierpont Morgan Library, the book is also an invaluable scholarly record. In addition to 123 catalogue entries and more than 350 reproductions of rarely-seen drawings, three in-depth essays contain discussions of the art of the period. Its development is traced from a late medieval style at the end of the fifteenth century to the influence of the Italian Renaissance and mannerism in the 1500s, and ultimately to the beginning of the baroque period in the early 1600s. The detailed entries encompass works by sixty-two artists, including Hieronymus Bosch, Jan Gossaert, Lucas van Leyden, Pieter Bruegel the Elder, Jan Brueghel the Elder, Karel van Mander, and others. The book will interest specialists and also general readers attracted by the warmth of Netherlandish art. This volume is a scholarly catalogue and essay collection accompanying an exhibition titled The Age of Bruegel: Netherlandish Drawings in the Sixteenth Century. It surveys the development of drawings in the Low Countries across the sixteenth century, tracking stylistic transitions from late medieval, through Renaissance influence and mannerism, toward early baroque tendencies. It contains three major essays: one, "The Sixteenth Century" by John Oliver Hand, another on Jan Gossaert and the new aesthetic by J. Richard Judson, and a third on "The functions of drawings in the Netherlands in the sixteenth century" by William W. Robinson and Martha Wolff. In addition to these essays, there is a detailed catalogue section with 123 entries of drawings, many of which are not often seen, including over 350 reproductions, both black and white and some in colour. The entries are richly annotated. Artists covered include Hieronymus Bosch, Jan Gossaert, Lucas van Leyden, Pieter Bruegel the Elder, Jan Brueghel the Elder, Karel van Mander, among others. The book combines connoisseurship, art historical analysis, exhibition documentation, and high-quality reproductions, aiming both at specialists in northern Renaissance/Netherlandish art and informed general readers interested in the history of drawing.






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