Étiquette : Patinir

 

ArtistCloseUp interviews Karel Vereycken on the creative method

Written By Editorial Team

What is your background and how did you start your journey in the art world?

“I was born in 1957 in Antwerp. My parents worked in the port and the ship repair industry. Their adolescence, studies and careers were reduced to zero by the war period and the need to bring an income and feed their brothers, parents and family. So for their children, my parents thought we should have the occasion to fully enjoy and explore the cultural dimensions.

My mother, who was prevented by the war to become an opera singer, got me into a music school. But at that time, the teaching methods, basically learning to read scores for two years before ever being allowed to sing, were so repugnant that I ran away from that. As an alternative, my mother sent me to a communal drawing school directed by a talented sculptor named Herman Cornelis. The bearded cigar-smoking giant would rip pages out of old books and stick them in my hands saying “copy this!”

At the same time, my father would take me every weekend to visit the numerous museums of Antwerp where paintings of Bruegel, Rembrandt, Bosch, Rubens, Van Eyck and many other Flemish masters were on show. Father couldn’t really explain why but knew this was somehow very important.

Antwerp has also a well preserved XVIth century print shop of Christopher Plantin, a French humanist who worked in that city in the 16th century with many cartographers such as Mercator and Ortelius, whose engraved globes and printed maps impressed me deeply.

Then, at age 12, I won my first art prize and my teacher convinced my mother “there was precious talent” in me. With that advice, my mother sent me to Brussels to attend the Saint Luke Art School and study Plastic Arts. Some teachers were quite annoying but others got us into deep study of anatomy, examining Leonardo da Vinci and Albrecht Dürer’s groundbreaking studies. I continued another two years at the Ecole Royale des Beaux Arts of Brussels to study copper engraving and got graduated “with distinction.”

I then moved to Paris and worked as a journalist and editor of a non-commercial militant paper. But after some years, I found out art was really lacking in my life so I returned to it. First by producing copies of old masters painting on wooden oak panels with hand-made egg tempera, venitian turpentine and various other ancient oil techniques I rediscovered with a friend of mine.

Since the people that ordered these painting took them home, at the end, I had nothing to put on show. Therefore, I returned to watercolors and etching. I also gave a three year course of drawing for some of my friends, mainly amateurs and beginners.”

What inspires you?

“What always attracted me in painting and imagining is the way art “makes visible” things and ideas that are “not visible” as such in the simple visible world but which “appear” in the minds of the viewer.

It took me over twenty years to sort out the difference between “symbols” (a “convention” accepted among a group or a code system designed to communicate a secret meaning), and “metaphor” which by assembling things unusual, by irony and paradox, allows the individual mind to “discover” the meaning the painter intended to transmit.

Such an approach offers the joy of discovery and surprise, a deep human quality. Modern art started as a non-figurative form of symbolism till “contemporary” art brought many artists to put an axe into the very idea of poetical meaning.

In 1957, the CIA sponsored, under various covers and often without the artists even knowing about it, many “abstract” artists to promote a form of art that it considered coherent with its ideology of “free enterprise.”

So what inspires me is true human culture, be it Chinese painting of the Song dynasty, the Buddhist sculptures of Gandhara, the early Flemish masters or the magnificent bronze heads of Ifé in current Nigeria. Bridging the distances in space and time, religion and philosophy, stands the celebration of unique human capacities, that of compassion, empathy and love.”

What themes do you pursue? Is there an underlying message in your work?

“I don’t pursue themes, they pursue me! My aim is to shock people by showing them that nothing is more “modern” and “revolutionary” than “classical” art, not understood as annoying academic formalism, but as a science of composition based on non-cynical, liberating ironical poetical metaphors, who are the key to all forms of art be it in the domain of the visual arts or music. Art is always a “gift” from the artist to the viewers and the act of giving is an act of love. That is the message.”

How would you describe your work?

“I consider my work as part of a teaching activity, as a sort of humanistic intellectual guerrilla “warfare.” Even if I appreciate selling my works, and get more resources available for my art work, I’m definitely not out to please a given public or to market an aesthetic object. What counts for me is to get viewers to reflect on how “art” can be a “window” to a dimension people intuitively know as important but were never given access to.

I also took dozens and dozens of friends on guided tours at the Louvre in Paris, to the Frankfurt Museum or to the Metropolitan in New York. Some of these guided visits have been audio-taped and are available on my website. After these tours, most of those I guided thanked me warmly saying “I never even suspected to what degree ideas are transmittable through paintings.””

Which artists influence you most?

“I have studied in depth the European renaissance in the works of Ghiberti, Van Eyck, Leonardo, followed by Piero della Francesca and Dürer, arab optical science gave us the science of perspective representation. I wrote several book-length articles on Rembrandt whose tenderness and profoundness moved me to tears. But if one looks to his life, he’s main quality was not his natural talent alone but the fact that he was such a hard worker. For example, to have your portrait done by Rembrandt, you had to pause for some time every day in his studio during at least three months! Having natural talents makes artists lazy! But having good results after much hard work is the trait of genius.

Deciphering Hieronymus Bosch images in his paintings brought me to explore all the ironies of the 15th Century’s Dutch language brought up by Erasmus and his circles. Viewing all of Goya’s work on show in Madrid was another shock to the degree that his painting is so political while remaining beautiful visual poetry in its own right. Emotionally, I identify mostly with him who saw, just as me, both Rembrandt, Erasmus and Bosch as the sources of his elan. Today, Gandhara Buddhist art is adding new dimensions I ignored and helps me to add the required nuances to my views mostly centered on European art.”

What is your creative process like?

“It takes a lot of courage to overcome the fear to be “completely alone” while you walk a road nobody ever walked on. Everything starts by having a “spark” of imagination and forge it into paradoxical metaphors. As an example, the way I created my work Stairway to Heaven (color etching on zinc, image 3). It started with my examination of the fantastic Chinese landscape paintings. Going through pictures of Chinese landscapes, I realized some of these paintings were not pure imagination but based on landscapes that really existed. The most fascinating of them are certainly those of an area called “Yellow mountains.”

Now at that time, I was also unraveling the way the Flemish painter Joachim Patinir painted his landscapes, as objects for religious contemplation. In the latter’s painting, man is seen, as in Augustinian philosophy, as a pilgrim, who has to learn how to detach himself from earthly possessions, that attachment considered a source of evil. The pilgrim is at the crossroads. By his free will he has to decide, either to take the easy road downhill or the difficult road uphill where he will reach out by going through a small gate.

So in my etching, I “married” a landscape from this Flemish school (on the left) with a view of China’s Yellow mountain. Initially, I had left out the pilgrim, but by working on the landscape, the idea came back to my mind. To accentuate that the road downhill was the road to evil, I added an owl, in Flemish folk art a symbol of evil since able to see in the dark and to grab you in your weakness. So, as one of my friends says, “behind Karel’s works, there’s always a story,” but it is up to you to discover it !”

What is an artist’s role in society and how do you see that evolving?

“I see on the internet dozens of very talented artists, the world is full of them! But what is required is a turn. What we need are political and financial elites willing to promote a culture that give these talents the chance and the means to shape the public and urban living space. We need a “culture of art” that makes people more and not less human.

As the German poet Friedrich Schiller said in his poem “The artists,” it is them that have the dignity of mankind in their hands, with them humanity rises or falls. Today, a much required turn is desirable. The despicable dictatorship of a handful of greedy gallerist sitting in London, Zurich, Venice and Geneva and deciding who is or is not a valuable artist should be brought to an end and I’m not even mentioning the laundering of criminal money it involves.”

Have you had any noteworthy exhibitions you’d like to share?

“With my colleagues from the workshop of Bo Halbirk in Montreuil, it was really nice in June 2024, to present my works at the 6th Exhibit of Contemporary Prints at the Paris Saint-Sulpice market. Going public, meeting art lovers and fellow artists is always a pleasure and a way to open new avenues. I need more of that!”


Website: artkarel.com

Instagram: @karelvereycken

Other links: www.facebook.com/karel.vereycken

Merci de partager !

Quinten Matsys and Leonardo — The Dawn of The Age of Laughter and Creativity

Par Karel Vereycken, August 2024.

Lire cet article en ligne en FR

Quinten Matsys, The Ill-Matched Couple, 1520-25, National Gallery, Washington.

By Karel Vereycken, August 2024.

Summary

Introduction

A. Making our values great again

  1. Cynical jokes or Socratic dialogue?
  2. What is Christian humanism?
  3. Petrarch and the “Triumph” of Death
  4. The Age of Good Laughter
  5. Sebastian Brant, Hieronymus Bosch and The Ship of Fools

B. Quinten Matsys’ Early Life and biography

  1. From blacksmith to painter
  2. Duchy of Brabant
  3. Training: Bouts, Memling and Van der Goes
  4. Getting started in Antwerp and abroad

C. Selected Works and thematics

  1. The Virgin and the Child, « Divine Grace » and « Free Will« 
  2. The Saint Anne Altarpiece
  3. A New Perspective
  4. Cooperation with Patinir and Dürer
  5. The Erasmus Connection
  6. Thomas More’s Utopia
  7. Pieter Gillis and « The Friendship diptych« 
  8. The Da Vinci Connection (I)

D. The Art of Erasmian Grotesque

  1. In religious paintings
  2. Misers, Bankers and Money-changers, the Fight against Usury
  3. The Da Vinci Connection (II)
  4. The Art of Grotesque per se
  5. The metaphor of the “Ill-matched Lovers”
  6. Leonardo’s baby: “The Ugly Duchess”

E. Conclusion

Selected Bibliography

Quinten Matsys.

At the turn of the century, attracting talents from all over the continent as a magnet, Antwerp, and with some 90,000 inhabitants, had become a growing port and trade center, outdoing the Medici’s dominated Brugge in importance.

It was in this environment of a boiling cultural melting-pot that Quinten Matsys met, discussed and collaborated with some of the brightest of the great christian humanists of his time, be it erudite peace activists such as Erasmus of Rotterdam, Thomas More and Pieter Gillis, innovative printers such as Dirk Martens from Aalst, demanding reformers such as Gerard Geldenhouwer and Cornelius Grapheus, Flemish painters such as Gerard David and Joachim Patinir or foreign engravers as Albrecht Dürer, Lucas van Leyden and Hans Holbein the Younger.

Unfortunately, today, large international publishing houses, such as Taschen, for reasons yet unclear, seem to have condemned this highly remarkable artist to oblivion. For all those reasons, one finds hardly mention of Matsys’ name. It only appears in a short chapter dealing with the “Antwerp school”, at the end of Les Primitifs flamands et leur temps (656 pages, Renaissance du Livre, 1994). Even worse, not a single of his works is presented and only two mentions of his name appear in L’art flamand et hollandais, le siècles des primitifs (613 pages, Citadelles et Mazenod, 2003).

The good news is that since 2007, the Ghent Interdisciplinary Centre for Art and Science is working on a new « catalogue raisonné » of his work. That of Larry Silver (Phaedon Press, 1984) is mostly unavailable or/and became largely unaffordable. What remains is the one of Andrée de Bosque (Arcade Press, Brussels, 1975), with very few color prints. As a consolation, readers can access Harald Brising’s 1908 doctoral thesis, in a reprint version of 2019.

To honor and do some justice to this artist, we will attempt to explore in this article some questions left unanswered so far. To what extent did Erasmus’ work directly inspired Matsys, Patinir and their circle? What do we know about the exchanges between this group and prominent Renaissance artists such as Leonardo da Vinci and Albrecht Dürer? What influence did the Erasmian artist exert on his foreign correspondents? Erasmus wasn’t really a fan of what was called “religious” paintings in those days, preferring agapic action for the common good to passive devotion of holy images.

As Belgian art critic Georges Marlier (1898-1968) pointed out in 1954, in his well documented book, while Erasmus respected and honored holy paintings if they evoked real religious sentiment, love and tenderness, that didn’t prevent him from thinking that:

Quinten Matsys. In the past, for good reasons this painting was named The Hypocrites, in modern times Two Praying Monks. (Galleria Arti Doria Pamphilj, Rome.)

Our previous inquiries into the works of both Erasmus and Dürer have familiarized us with Matsys’ age and its challenges, a subject we can not redevelop here at full length, but which gives the author some solid grounds to accomplish this task.

A. Getting our values straight

1. Cynical jokes or Socratic dialogue?

« Tussen neus en lepel », Dutch proverb meaning literally « between nose and spoon », i.e. « between one thing and another. »

Many modern viewers, with untrained eyes and minds steeped in a culture of abusive wokism and pessimism, lack the moral and intellectual integrity to understand the jokes, irony and metaphors which were the very essence of cultural life in the Low Countries of that time.

Lost in their own cultural prejudices, in looking at a painted face, they miss the visual puns the artist is making, trying instead to establish its identity as if the subject was a portrait. They pay obsessive (eventually useful) attention to “secret” and symbolic meanings of iconographic details hoping that their sum will somehow allow them to arrive at a sort of meaning.

We will look here afresh at Erasmus’, Matsys’ and Leonardo’s “grotesques,” which are not “cynical jokes” showing a “lack of tolerance” towards “ugly”, “sick”, “abnormal” or “different” people, as the accusation goes, but caricatures and jokes aimed to free our minds!

Erasmus and his three main followers Rabelais, Cervantes and Shakespeare, are the real if rarely recognized incarnations of “Christian humanism” and good laughter as a powerful political weapon to educate people’s characters, was not yet outlawed at their time.

2. What is Christian Humanism?

The thrust of Erasmus‘ educational and political programme was the promotion of docta pietas, learned piety, or what he termed the “Philosophy of Christ”. It can be summarized as a “wedding” between the humanist principles summarized in Plato’s Republic and the agapic notion of man transmitted by the Holy scriptures and the writing’s of those early fathers of the Church as Jerome and Augustine who saw Plato as their imperfect precursor.

In a complete phase shift and break with feudal “blind” faith putting man’s hope uniquely in his salvation by Christ in a putative existence after death, for christian humanism, man’s nature is good and therefore the origin of evil is not man himself or some outside “Devil”, but those vices and moral afflictions Plato basically identified in his Republic centuries before being turned by the christian humanists into the famous “Seven Capital Sins” that had to be overcome by the “Seven Capital Virtues.”

Hieronymus Bosch, The Seven Deadly Sins and the las four things (Death, Jugement, Heaven and Hell), c. 1500, painted table, , Prado, Madrid.

As a reminder, these deadly sins are:

  1. Pride, (Superbia, hubris) as opposed to Humility (Humilitas);
  2. Greed (Avaricia) as opposed to Charity (Caritas, Agapè);
  3. Wrath (Ira, rage) as opposed to Patience (Patientia);
  4. Envy (Invidia, jealousy) as opposed to Kindness (Humanitas);
  5. Lust (Luxuria, fornication) as opposed to Chastity (Castitas);
  6. Gluttony (Gula) as opposed to Temperance (Temperantia);
  7. Sloth (Acedia, melancholy, spleen, moral laziness) as opposed to Diligence (Diligentia).

Isn’t it quite telling for our own times that these sins (affections preventing us from doing the good), and not their opposing virtues, have tragically been consecrated as the very basic values guaranteeing the well-functioning of the current “Neo-liberal” financial system and its « rules-based » world order!

“Private vices make public virtue”, argued Bernard Mandeville in his 1705’s The Fable of the Bees. It is the dynamics of particular interests that stimulate the prosperity of a society, according to this Dutch theorist who inspired Adam Smith, and for whom “morality” only invites lethargy and provokes the misfortune of the city.

It is greed and perpetual pleasure-seeking and not the Common Good that have been proclaimed to be man’s essential motives, according to the dominant school of British Empiricism: Locke, Hume, Smith and consorts.

“Charity,” “Care” and “Humanitarian” aid have been reduced to a despicable and increasingly rare Lady-do-rightly activity allowing the current system to perpetuate its criminal existence. Oligarchical and banking families’ “charities” and “foundations” have even become the oligarchy’s tool to impose their perpetual dominance.

3. Petrarch and the “Triumph of Death”

Daniel Hopfer, Women looking in a mirror, surprised by Death and the Devil, 1515, copper engraving.

Christianity, as all major humanist religions, relentlessly labor to shake up those wasting their lives in sinful behavior by showing them how their behavior is both dramatic and even ridiculous in light of the extreme shortness of individual physical existence.

Dürer made this the core theme of his three famous Meisterstiche (master engravings) who have to be interpreted and cannot be understood but as one single unity: Knight, Death and the Devil (1513), Saint Jerome in His Study (1514) and Melencolia I (1514).

In each of these engravings one can find an hourglass, metaphor for the inexorable march of time. Saint Jerome is often depicted with an hourglass (time) and a skul (mortality), a metaphor for vanitas. Erasmus made of these concepts his personal banner together with the moto: “Concedi Nulli » which refers to death saying that nobody will escape her grip, underlining even more the inexorable nature of human mortality. In that sense, the Christian Renaissance, was a mass movement for spiritual immortality, both against religious superstition and against the revival of Greco-Roman paganism.

This conceptual theme was congruent with Francis Petrach’s (1304-1374) poetic I Trionfi cycle (1351-1374), structured in six allegorical triumphs.

Illustration of Petrarch’s Triomph of Fame over Death.

Petrarch’s triumphs are “concatenated,” so that the Triumph of Love (over Mankind and even Gods) is itself triumphed over by another allegorical force, the Triumph of Chastity. In its turn, Chastity is triumphed over by Death; Death is overcome by Fame; Fame is conquered by Time; and even Time is ultimately overcome by Eternity, the Triumph of God over all such worldly concerns.

Since death will “triumph” at the end of our ephemeral physical existence, the fear of death and the fear of God should help man concentrate to contribute something immortal to future generations rather than get lost in the labyrinth of earthly pleasures and pains that Hieronymus Bosch’s (1450-1516) depicted with great irony in his Garden of Earthly delights (1503-1515), .

Leonardo, whose far advanced scientific-religious sentiment was considered a heresy by many in Rome, expressed with some anger in his notebooks that many men and women didn’t merit the beautiful human body God gave them.

4. The Age of “Good Laughter”

Dictionaries have it that people have a “good laugh” when they find amusing and funny a situation that was at first upsetting. In short, good laughter is the reward of a true creative process when the “agony” of looking for solutions ends with finding one. That can be for scientific and practical questions but also in the development process of one’s personal identity. The storm and the clouds are gone and full light brings a new perspective.

Erasmus, « grotesque » self-portrait.

For the Christian humanists, through the “mirror-effect” intrinsically inherent to a “Socratic dialogue” (which starts by accepting what you know not – called docta ignorantia by Cusanus), man has and can be freed from these “sinful” afflictions, because man’s free will can be mobilized to bring him to act in accordance to his real (good) nature, that of dedicating himself and getting his ultimate pleasure in accomplishing the common good in service of the others, including in economic activities.

By claiming that man’s life on earth is fully predetermined by God, Luther’s denied the existence of the free will, and made man totally irresponsible for his own deeds. That viewpoint was the exact opposite of that of Erasmus who had started calling on the Church to curb their financial abuses such as the famous “indulgencies” longtime before Luther was brought on the scene.

All of Erasmus’ writings where put on the index of forbidden literature for Catholics. They remained on that list till 1910.

The Christian Humanists were firmly committed to elevate our souls to the highest realm of moral and intellectual beauty by freeing us from our earthly attachments — not by inflicting guilt feelings or moral orations and the lucrative business of fear from hell, but by laughter!

Laughter can ruin the authority of the powerful and the tyrants. Therefore, it is the most devastating political weapon ever conceived. For the evil forces, truth-seeking laughter, of the sort promoted by Erasmus and his followers, had and remains to be ignored, slandered and as much as possible eradicated and replaced with melancholy, obedience and submission to in advance justified narratives and doctrines of painful scholastic constipation.

5. Sebastian Brant, Hieronymus Bosch and The Ship of Fools

Albrecht Dürer, portrait of Sebastian Brant.

Years before Erasmus published his In Praise of Folly (written in 1509 and first published in Paris in 1511), the Strasbourg humanist poet and social reformer Sebastian Brant (1558-1921), opened the of the gates of such Socratic laughter with his Narrenshiff (The Ship of Fools, published in 1494 in Basel, Strasbourg, Paris and Antwerp), a hilarious satirical work illustrated with engravings of Albrecht Dürer (1471-1528) and later Holbein the Younger (1497-1543). 73 of the 105 illustrations for the original edition were produced by Dürer.

Brant was a key contact and ally of Johann Froben (1460-1529) and Johann Amerbach (1441-1513), the Swiss printer families that later welcomed Erasmus when being persecuted in the Low Countries he had to go into exile in Basel.

The Ship of Fools took Europe by a storm. Brant was not only a satirist but a well educated humanist who had notably translated Petrarch’s poems.

“Genre-painting,” wrote Georges Marlier in 1954 and more recently the American art historian Larry Silver, depicting aspects of everyday life by portraying ordinary people engaged in common activities, was born with Quinten Matsys (One should rather say with the Erasmian paradigm we just identified).

Images of more ordinary women and men, wealthy tradesman and bankers, suddenly appeared as sovereign individuals to be portrayed for their own merits rather than as donors praying while assisting at a religious scene. Dürer made an engraving of « a cook and his wife. »

Of course, times had changed and so had the client-base of painters. The orders came much less from the religious orders and wealthy cardinals in Rome and increasingly more from wealthy bourgeois out to embellish their homes and eager to offer their portraits to friends.

The expansion of the Antwerp market that made paintings available as a middle-class luxury product is a well-studied phenomenon, and research has confirmed Ludovico Guicciardini’s claim that there were at least 300 active painters’ workshops in Antwerp by the 1560s.

Brant’s Ship of Fools, was a real turning point and game changer of the day, the prelude of a new paradigm. It marked the beginning of a long arch of creativity, reason and education through healthy laughter whose echo resonated loudly until the death of Pieter Bruegel the Elder in 1569. That élan was ony halted when Charles Vth resurrected the Inquisition in 1521 by plublishing his decrees (“placards”) forbidding ordinary citizens from reading, commenting and discussing the Bible.

The Ship of Fools is divided in 113 sections, each of which, with the exception of a short introduction and two concluding pieces, treats independently of a certain class of fools or vicious persons; and we are only occasionally reminded of the fundamental idea by an allusion to the ship. No folly of the century is left uncensored. The poet attacks with noble zeal the failings and extravagances of his age, and applies his sword unsparingly even against the dreaded Hydra of popery and monasticism.

The book opens with the denunciation of the first fool, one which turns away from the study of all the wonderful books in his possession. The third one (out of 113), not far away, is greed and avarice.

Coherent with this, is Hieronymus Bosch’s partly lost triptych. Modern research has established that Bosch’s Ship of Fools (Louvre, Paris), eventually painted before Brant wrote his satire, was the left panel of a triptych whose right panel was The Death of the Miser (National Gallery, Washington).

Interesting here, is the fact that there is no fatality in this painting and that what people become, a fool or a wise man, depends on each person’s personal decision, a doctrine quintessential to the convictions of the Brothers of the Common Life with whom Bosch, without being a member, had major affinities. Even the miser, until his last breath, can choose between looking up to Christ or down to the devil!

We ignore the theme of the central panel which is lost. But we do know that the backsides of the two lateral panels folded together complete the image of a Door-to-door salesman (before mistakenly called The return of the prodigal son) also depicted on the outside panels of Bosch’s triptych of the Hay wagon, showing kings, princes and popes running after a wagon full of hay (a metaphor for money).

The theme of a peregrinating peddler was very popular among the Brothers of the Common Live and the Devotio Moderna for whom individual responsibility and choice was decisive for each person to save above all himself with some help of God.

For Augustine, man is permanently confronted with an existential choice. Either he takes the bumpy, difficult road moving him to a spiritually more elevated position and closer to God, or he goes down the easy way by attaching himself to earthly passions and affections. The beauty of man and nature, warns Augustine, can and should be fully enjoyed and celebrated under condition they are understood as a mere “foretaste of divine wisdom” and not as purely earthly pleasures. The peddler as found in Bosch and Patinir is therefore a metaphor of mankind fighting to remain on the right road and in the right direction.

Bosch will populate his paintings with deprived men and women running like brainless animals behind little fruits as cherries and beys, metaphors for extremely ephemeral earthly pleasures unable to offer any real durable satisfaction.

Hans Holbein the Younger. Illustration for Erasmus’ In Praise of Folly. The homo viator, always going from one place to the next.

The peddler advances “op een slof en een schoen” (on a slipper and a shoe) i.e., he has abandoned his house and has left the created world of sin (we see a bordello, drunkards, etc.), and all material possessions. With his “staff” (a symbol of Faith) he succeeds in repelling the “infernal dogs” (Evil) that try to hold him back. Such metaphorical images are not personal outbursts of the exuberant imagination of Bosch, but a common image very much used in that period. An illumination of a fourteenth-century English psalm book, the Luttrell Psalter, features exactly the same allegorical representation.

The same theme, that of a homo viator, the man who detaches himself from earthly goods, is also recurrent in the art and literature of this period, particularly since the Dutch translation of Pèlerinage de la vie et de l’âme humaine (pilgrimage of life and the human soul), written in 1358 by the Norman Cistercian monk Guillaume de Degulleville (1295-after 1358).

If the three surviving images on the panels of the Bosch triptych (the Ship of fools, the Miser and the Peregrinating peddler) are hard to connect when analysed separately, their coherence appears strongly once one identifies this overriding concept.

Today, an imaginative, creative painter could try to find out what Bosch’s lost panel would have looked like, the theme certainly having focused on the origin of evil (going from a ship of fools to the death of the miser).

B. Quinten Matsys, biographical elements

With this in mind, and knowing what were the stakes at that time, we can now examine more profoundly Matsys’ life and some of his works.

1. From Blacksmith to painter

Quinten Matsys, bronze medal with self-portrait.

One of four children, Quinten Matsys was born in Leuven to Joost Matsys (d. 1483) and Catherine van Kincken sometime between April 4 and September 10, 1466. Most early accounts of Matsys’ life are composed primarily of legends and very little contemporary accounts exist of the nature of his activities or character.

According to the Historiae Lovaniensium by Joannes Molanus (1533-1585), Matsys was born in Leuven between April 4 and September 10, 1466, as one of four children of Joost Matsys (d. 1483) and Catherine van Kincken.

Most accounts of his life blend fact and legend. In reality, there are very few clues as to his activity or character.

In Leuven, Quinten is said to have had modest beginnings as an ironworker. Legend has it that he fell in love with a beautiful girl who was also being courted by a painter. As the girl much preferred painters to blacksmiths, Quentin quickly abandoned the anvil for the paintbrush.

In 1604, chronicler Karel Van Mander states that Quintin, stricken with an illness since the age of twenty, “was in the impossibility to earn his bread” as a blacksmith.

Van Mander reminds us that in Antwerp, during « Shrove Tuesday » celebrations,

Karel Vereycken, Antwerp, etching on zinc, 2011.

In Antwerp, in front of Our Lady’s cathedral at the Handschoenmarkt (glove market), one still can find the « putkevie » (a decorated wrought iron gate on a well) said to be made by Quinten Matsys himself and depicting the legend of Silvius Brabo and Druon Antigoon, respectively the names of a mythical Roman officer who liberated Antwerp from the oppression of a giant called Antigoon who would harm the trade of the city by blocking the entrance of the river.

The inscription on the well reads: “Dese putkevie werd gesmeed door Quinten Matsijs. De liefde maeckte van den smidt eenen schilder.” (« The ironwork for this well was forged by Quinten Matsys. Love made the blacksmith a painter. »)

Documented donations and possessions of Quinten’s father Joost Matsys indicate that the family had a respectable income and that financial need was not the most likely reason for which Matsys turned to painting.

Quinten Matsys, Virgin and Child Enthroned with Four Angels, 1505.

Although no evidence exists documenting Quinten Metsys’ training before his enrolment as a free master in the Antwerp painter’s guild in 1491, his brother Joos Matsys II’s design project in Leuven and their father’s activities suggest that the young artist first learned how to draw and transfer his ideas to paper from his family and that they first exposed him to architectural forms and their creative deployment.

His earlier works in particular clearly suggest that he had training as an architectural draughtsman. In his 1505 Virgin and Child Enthroned with Four Angels, the divine titular characters are seated on a gilded throne whose gothic tracery echoes that in the window on the parchment drawing and the limestone model for the St Peter’s project to which his brother was assigned at around the same time.

In 1897, Edward van Even, without presenting any evidence, wrote that Matsys also composed music, wrote poetry and produced etchings.

What we do know for sure is that the artist produced some magnificent bronze medaillons representing Erasmus, his sister Catarina and himself.

Around 1492, he married Alyt van Tuylt, who gave him three children: two sons, Quinten and Pawel, and a daughter, Katelijne. Alyt died in 1507 and Quentin remarried a year later. With his new wife Catherina Heyns, they had ten more children, five sons and five daughters. Shortly after their father’s death, two of his sons, Jan (1509-1575) and Cornelis (1510-1556), became painters and members of the Antwerp Guild.

2. The Duchy of Brabant

Leuven.

Leuven, at that time, was the capital of the Duchy of Brabant which extended from Luttre, south of Nivelles to ‘s Hertogenbosch. It included the cities of Aalst, Antwerp, Mechelen, Brussels and Leuven, where in 1425, one of the first universities of Europe saw the light.

Five years later, in 1430, together with the Duchies of Lower Lotharingia and Limburg, Brabant was inherited by Philip the Good of Burgundy and became part of the Burgundian Netherlands.

Then, when Matsys was around 11 years old, in 1477, the Duchy of Brabant fell under Hapsburg rule as part of the dowry of Mary of Burgundy to Spanish king Charles V.

The subsequent history of Brabant is part of the history of the Hapsburg « Seventeen Provinces » increasingly under the control of such Augsburg banking families as the Fuggers and Welsers.

Erasmus and Matsys epoch was a glorious period of the “Renaissance in the North” but also marks the continuous efforts of these banking families’ to “buy up” the papacy and achieve world hegemony. The imperial geopolitical sharing of the entire world among the Spanish Empire (run by Venetian and Fugger bankers) and the Portuguese Empire (run by Genovese and Welser bankers), a deal formalized by the Treaty of Tordesillas, endorsed in 1494 in the Vatican by Pope Alexander VI Borgia, opened the gates to colonial subjugation of people and countries, fueled by a highly questionable sense of cultural superiority.

Following the never-ending state bankruptcies of these financial oligarchs, the Low Countries fell prey to economic looting, military dictatorship and fanaticism. By demonizing Luther, increasingly committed to creating an opposition outside the Catholic church, the oligarchy avoided successfully those urgent reforms called for by the Erasmians to eradicate abuses and corruption inside the Catholic church. Rome’s refusal to accept Henry VIII’s demands for divorce, were part of an overall strategy to plunge the entire European continent in “religious wars,” that only ended with the 1648 Peace of Westphalia.

3. Training: Bouts, Van der Goes and Memling

The early triptychs, painted by Matsys, gained him a lot of praise and got historians to present him as one of the last “Flemish Primitives”, in reality a nickname given by Michelangelo to intrinsically slander and discredit all non-Italian art considered “Gothic” (barbarian), or “primitive” in comparison to Italian art whichh immitated the immortal antique style.

Since he was born in Leuven, it has been thought he could have been trained by Aelbrecht Bouts (1452-1549), the son of painter dominating Leuven at that time, Dieric Bouts the Elder (v. 1415-1475).

In 1476, one year after his father’s death, Albrecht reportedly left Leuven, perhaps to complete his training with a master outside the city, most probably Hugo van der Goes (1440-1482), whose influence on Aelbrecht Bouts, but also on Quinten Matsys, seems to have been direct.

Van der Goes, who became the dean of the Painting guild of Ghent in 1474 and died in 1482 in Red Cloister close to Brussels, was a vehement follower of the Brother’s of the Common Life and their principles. As a young assistant of Aelbrecht Bouts, and getting training from Van der Goes, Matsys could have discovered what was the cradle of Christian humanism at that time.

Van der Goes‘s most famous surviving work is the Portinari Triptych (Uffizi, Florence), an altarpiece commissioned for the church of Sant’Egidio in the hospital of Santa Maria Nuova in Florence by Tommaso Portinari, the manager of the Bruges branch of the Medici Bank.

The raw features of the shepherds (expressing the three states of spiritual elevation identified by the Brothers of the Common Life) in van der Goes’s composition made a deep impression on painters working in Florence.

Quinten Matsys, portrait of Jacob Obrecht, 1496, Forth Worth.

Matsys is also considered as a possible pupil of Hans Memling (1430-1494), the latter being a follower of Van der Weyden and a leading painter in Brugge.

Memling’s style and that of Matsys, in certain aspects, are hard to distinguish.

While the Flemish art historian Dirk de Vos inscribed, in his 1994 catalogue of Hans Memling’s work, the portrait of the musician and composer Jacob Obrecht (1496, Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth), as a very late work by Hans Memling, current experts, among which Larry Silver, agreed in 2018, that in reality, it is far more likely that the portrait is the earliest known work of Quinten Matsys.

Obrecht, who was a major influence on polyphonic Renaissance music, had been named choirmaster of the Cathedral of Our Lady in Antwerp in 1492. Erasmus served as one of Obrecht’s choirboys around 1476.

Obrecht made at least two trips to Italy, once in 1487 at the invitation of Duke Ercole d’Este I of Ferrare and again in 1504. Ercole had heard Obrecht’s music, which is known to have circulated in Italy between 1484 and 1487, and said that he appreciated it above the music of all other contemporary composers; consequently he invited Obrecht who died from the plague in Italy.

Already in the 1460s, Erasmus teacher in Deventer, music composer and organist Rudolph Agricola, had travelled to Italy. After studying civil low in Pavia and attending lectures by Battista Guarino, he went to Ferrare where he became a protégé of the Este court.

Around 1499 Leonardo made a drawing of Ercole’s daughter, Isabella d’Este, according to some to be the person painted in the Mona Lisa.

4. Getting started in Antwerp and abroad

Matsys was registered in Leuven in 1491, but the same year he was equally admitted as a master painter in the Guild of St Luke in Antwerp where, at the age of twenty-five, he decided to settle. In Antwerp, as said before, he depicted the choirmaster Jacob Obrecht in 1496, his first known work, and several Virgin and Child devotional paintings.

After that, since the Liggeren (painting guild records) don’t report any information about Matsys activity in the Low Countries for a period of several years, it remains very tempting to imagine Matsys going on an eventual trip to Italy. There, he could have met great masters among which Leonardo da Vinci, who lived in Milan between 1482 and 1499 and returned to Milan in 1506 where he met his pupil Francesco Melzi (1491-1567) who later accompanied him to France. Matsys could also have traveled over the Rhine to Strasbourg or Colmar. He eventually could have traveled to Nuremberg where he could have met Albrecht Dürer which he seems to have known longtime before the latter came to the Netherlands in 1520.

Dürer was sent by his parents to Alsace to be trained in the art of engraving by Martin Schongauer (1450-1491). But when he arrived in Colmar in the summer of 1492, Schongauer had died. From Colmar the artist traveled to Basel, where he made designs for the woodcut illustrations for books and discovered the impressive engravings of Jacob Burgkmair (1473-1531) and Hans Holbein the Elder (1460-1524). He then went to Strasbourg in 1492 where he met and made the portrait of the erudite humanist poet and author Sebastian Brant already mentioned above.

C. Selected Works

1. The Virgin and the Child, Divine Grace and the Free Will

In 1495, Matsys painted a Virgin and Child (left) (Brussels). Even while still very normative, Matsys already “enriches” devotion with less formal scenery of daily life. The child, playfully exploring new physical principles, clumsily tries to turn the pages of a book, while a very serious Virgin sits herself in an elaborated niche of Gothic architecture, probably chosen to fit with the building or house where the work would end up being exposed.

Another Virgin and Child (right) (Rotterdam) of Matsys goes even further in this direction. It shows a quite happy caring young mother with a playful child, underlying the fact that Christ was the son of God but now had become human.

On a display close to the viewer, a loaf of bread and a cup of milk-soup with a spoon, undoubtedly the daily scene for most inhabitants of the Low Countries trying to feed their children.

Gerard David, Madonna and Child with the Milk Soup, 1520, Brussels

Another “Madonna and child with the milk soup,” (Brussels) this one painted in 1520 by Matsys’ friend, the painter Gerard David (1460-1523), literally shows a young mother teaching her child that the backside of a spoon is not the best tool to transfer milk soup to one’s mouth.

One outstanding feature of many virgins of these period, be it by Quinten Matsys (Virgin and Child, Louvre, 1529, Paris) or Gerard David (Rest on the flight into Egypt, National Gallery, Washington), is the image of the child trying, with great difficulties, to get a hold on a fruit, be it a cherry or a grape of raisin.

In 1534, in his Diatribe on the Free Will, Erasmus also used this metaphor on the fragile equilibrium to be considered in the proportion between the operations of the free will (which, alone, separated from a higher purpose, can become pure arrogance) and those of divine grace (which alone can be misunderstood as a form of predestination).

To make that point clear with an image, Erasmus paints a very simple metaphor, but of extreme tenderness and beauty:

Jan Matsys, Virgin and Child, 1537, Metropolitan, New York.

In short, free will, yes, but without pretending that man can do it alone.

2. Saint Anne Altarpiece

The painted « portico » on the flat panel formed one single unity with the three dimensional original frame, lost today.

In Antwerp, Matsys’ activity made a major step forward with the first important public commissions for two large triptych altarpieces:

  • the beautiful Lamentation quite inspired by Roger Van der Weyden’s Deposition of the cross (Prado, Madrid) ;
  • the Saint Anne Altarpiece (1507–1509), painted for the Collegiate Church of St Peter in Leuven and signed “Quinte Metsys screef dit.” (Quinten Metsys wrote this).

The content and narrative of the Saint Anne Alterpiece was of course entirely dictated to the painter by the commissioners willing to decorate their dedicated chapel of the Church. The central panel depicts the history of the family of St Anne – the Holy Kinship – inside a monumental building crowned by a truncated dome and arcades that offer a wide view on a mountainous landscape.

The altarpiece depicts five scenes from the life of Anne, the Virgin’s mother and her husband Joachim. The various members of the saint’s family appear on the central panel. The key event in the life of Anne and her husband Joachim, namely that they will become the parents of the Virgin Mary while they thought themselves incapable of having children, is depicted in the left and right panels of the triptych.

The Chaste Kiss

The Virgin’s “immaculate” conception, depicted as a chaste kiss between the couple in front of the Golden Gate of the Jerusalem city wall, was already a very popular subject matter painted before by Giotto and later by Dürer.

The “chaste kiss” as a metaphor for the immaculate conception of the Virgin, was well received by the public. As a result, it was rapidly transposed to the immaculate conception of Christ himself. Hence, the sudden appearance of paintings showing Mary “kissing” her baby as close as on the lips.

The cycle on the Altarpiece ends with Anne’s death depicted on the inside right panel where she is surrounded by her children and Christ giving his blessings.

Despite the impressive scale and the conventional narrative, Matsys sought to create a more intimate feeling of contemplation. An example of this is the figure of the small cousin of Jesus in the left corner, who playfully gathers beautiful illuminations around him and, now fully focused, tries to read them.

3. A new perspective

In two other articles, I have underscored the fact that both Jan Van Eyck and Lorenzo Ghiberti, were quite familiar with “Arab optics”, in particular the works of Ibn al-Haytham (known by his Latinized name Alhazen).

During the Renaissance, at least two “schools”, after opposing each other, ended up completing each other respecting the best way to represent “space” in art. For one school, centered on Alberti, space could be reduced to a “central” vanishing point, i.e. a purely mathematical geometrical construction. For the other, that of Roger Bacon, Witelo and later Kepler, one had to start from the physiognomy of both eyes and how they produce the image of space in the mind. Van Eyck and Ghiberti used both approaches employing either the one-eyed « cyclopic » Alberti model denounced by Leonardo, or the « bi-focal » Alhazen approach.

Since the cyclopic approach has been decreed to be the only “mathematical” and therefore the only “scientific” way to represent space, the bi-focal approach was slandered as being full of “errors” or purely intuitive and “non-scientific”. Among those accused, most paintings of the “Flemish Primitives”

Now, as mentioned earlier, since 2007, the Ghent Interdisciplinary Centre for Art and Science (GICAS) has been working on a new « catalogue raisonné » of the work of Quinten Matsys.

In 2010, Jochen Ketels and Maximiliaan Martens investigated Matsys’s 1509 Saint Anne Altarpiece and the impressive italianate portico on the central panel to be understood as a visual element integrating the entire work in a three-dimensional wooden frame currently lost (see images above).

Albrecht Dürer, after Piero della Francesca. What Dürer calles Piero’s « transfer » method would become the basis for projective geometry, the key science that made possible the industrial revolution.

In this respect, it is noteworthy that one of the rare persons, in contact with Matsys at one point or another, which had read and studied Piero della Francesca’s treaty on perspective was none-other than Albrecht Dürer, whose own Four Books on Human Proportion (1528) builds on Piero’s groundbreaking achievements.

The investigators also verified Matsys’ use of the central vanishing point perspective by employing the “cross-ratio” method. Astonished, they demonstrate that “Matsys shows his competence in matters of perspective, equal to Italian renaissance standards” and that his perspective was “very correct, indeed.”

Source: Ghent University publication

Till now, it was taken for granted that the science of perspective only reached the Low Countries after Jan Gossaert’s trip to Rome in 1508, while Matsys’s, showing his masterful and extensive knowledge of science of perspective, started composing this oeuvre as early as 1507.

4. Matsys’ cooperation with Patinir, Dürer and Leonardo

One last note regarding this painting, the mountainous landscape behind the figures, already akin to the typical, eerie landscapes produced years later by Matsys’ friend Joachim Patinir 1480-1524, another badly known giant in the history of painting.

Felipe de Guevara, a friend and artistic assessor to both Charles V and Philip II, mentions Patinir in his Commentaries on Painting (1540) as one of the three greatest painters, alongside Rogier van der Weyden and Jan van Eyck.

Antwerp.
Albrecht Dürer, portrait de Joachim Patinir.

A final note on this painting: the mountainous landscape behind the figures already resembles the typical, disquieting landscapes produced by Matsys’s close friend Joachim Patinir (1480-1524), another little-known giant in the history of painting.

Yet Patinir’s authority was no mean feat. Felipe de Guevara, friend and artistic advisor to Charles V and Philip II, mentions Patinir in his Commentaries on Painting (1540) as one of the three greatest painters in the region, alongside Rogier van der Weyden and Jan van Eyck.

Patinir ran a large studio with assistants in Antwerp. Among those under the triple influence of Bosch, Matsys and Patinir are:

  • Cornelis Matsys (1508-1556), son of Quinten, who married Patinir’s daughter;
  • Herri met de Bles (1490-1566), active in Antwerp, possible nephew of Patinir;
  • Lucas Gassel (1485-1568), active in Brussels and Antwerp;
  • Jan Mostaert (1475-1552), painter active in Haarlem;
  • Frans Mostaert (1528-1560), painter active in Antwerp;
  • Jan Wellens de Cock (1460-1521), painter active in Antwerp;
  • Matthijs Wellens de Cock (1509-1548), painter-engraver active in Antwerp;
  • Jérôme Wellens de Cock (1510-1570), painter-engraver, who, with his wife Volcxken Diericx, founded In de Vier Winden, probably the largest engraving workshop north of the Alps at the time, employing Pieter Brueghel the Elder.
Cornelis Matsys, The Blind Guiding the Blind (1550). 4,5 x 7,8 cm. Etching that inspired Pieter Brueghel the Elder for his own painting on this theme in 1558.

It is generally accepted that Matsys painted the figures in some of Patinir’s landscapes. According to the 1574 Escorial inventory, this was the case for The Temptations of Saint Anthony (1520, Prado, Madrid).

One is tempted to think that this collaboration between friends worked both ways, with Patinir creating landscapes for Matsys’ works and at his request, a reality that somewhat challenges the persistent myth of a Renaissance presented as the cradle of modern individualism.

The fact that Matsys and Patinir were very close is confirmed by the fact that, after Patinir’s untimely death (at age 44), Matsys became the guardian of his two daughters. It’s also interesting to note that Gerard David, who became Bruges’ leading painter after Memling, became a member of the St. Lucas guild in Antwerp in 1515 jointly with Patinir, which gave him legal access to the booming Antwerp art market.

Modern art historians tend to present Patinir as the “inventor” of landscape painting (see my article), claiming that for him religious subjects were mere pretexts for the development of landscapes that were the true protagonists, much as Rubens painted Adam and Eve only because we wanted to paint nudes.

Eventually true for Rubens but dead wrong for Patinir, whose “beautiful” landscapes, as art historian Reindert L. Falkenberg documented in depth, were nothing but a sophisticated sort of deceptive trick of the devil attracting souls to attach themselves to earthly pleasure…

Henri Leys, Visit of Dürer to Antwerp, 1855, Antwerp.

Albrecht Dürer

A unique source of information is Dürer’s diary of his visit to the Low Countries. Why did Dürer come to the Low Countries? One of the explanations is that following the death of his main patron and order giver emperor Maximilian I, the artist came in an effort to get his pension confirmed by Charles V.

Dürer arrived in Antwerp on August 3, 1520 and visited Brussels and Mechelen where he was received by Margaret of Austria (1480-1530), aunt of Charles V, who sometimes lent Erasmus a sympathetic ear, in charge of administering the Burgondian Low Countries as long as Charles was to young.

In Mechelen, Dürer certainly visited the beautiful residence of Hieronymus van Busleyden (1470-1517), soon to become the financial mecenas of the “Trilingual College” launched by Erasmus in Leuven in 1517. Busleyden was a friend of Cuthbert Tunstall (1475-1559), the Bishop of London who introduced him to Thomas More.

While staying with Margaret, Dürer could admire an incredible painting from her collection, The Arnolfini couple (1434) by Jan van Eyck. Margaret had just granted a pension to a Venetian painter, Jacopo de’ Barbari (1440-1515), a diplomat and political exile in Mechelen who painted a portrait of Luca Pacioli (1445-1514), the Franciscan who introduced Leonardo to Euclid and wrote the De Divina Proportiona (1509), illustrated by Leonardo. De’ Barbari was described by his contemporaries, including Dürer, Marcantonio Michiel (1584-1552), and Gerard Geldenhauer (1482-1542).

In 1504, de’ Barbari met Dürer in person in Nuremberg and the pair discussed the canon of human proportions, a core subject of the latter’s research.

Hence, an unpublished draft version of Dürer’s own treatise on the subject reveals that he thought the Italian was holding back on him:

By March of 1510 de’ Barbari was in the employ of Archduchess Margaret in Brussels and Mechelen. In January 1511, he fell ill and made a will, and, in March, the Archduchess gave him a pension for life on account of his age and weakness. He was dead by 1516, leaving the Archduchess with his stock of 23 engraving plates. But when Dürer asked her to provide some of de’ Barbari’s writings on human proportion, she politely declined his request.

The artist’s diary reveals nevertheless that he was often entertained by his local colleagues. In Antwerp, « I went to see Quinten Matsys in his house, » wrote Dürer in his journal.

In the same city, he makes a portrait sketch of Lucas van Leyden (1489-1533), and the famous portrait of the 93 year old bearded old man who became the model for his St. Jerome.

Hans Schwartz, portrait of Dürer, bronze medallion, 1520.

He met Erasmus at least three times, and sketched a wonderful portrait of him showing mutual complicity. Erasmus placed an order with him since the humanist needed a large number of portraits to send to his correspondents throughout Europe. As his diary indicates, Dürer sketched Erasmus several times in charcoal during these meetings and used them for an engraved portrait of him six years later.

After the death of his wife, Patinir married Johanna Noyts. On 5 May 1521, he invited Albrecht Dürer to his wedding. How and when that friendship started, or if it was just opportunistic, is not known. The master of Nuremberg sketched Patinir’s portrait and called him « der gute Landschaftsmaler » (« the good landscape painter »), creating a new word for what became a new genre.

At the wedding he meets Jan Provoost (1465-1529), Jan Gossaert (of Mabuse) (1462-1533 ) and Bernard van Orley (1491-1542), some of them more attracted by the pomp of the court than by Erasmian humanism. But Provoost’s Death and the Miser (1515) is clearly inspired by Bosch.

Jan Provoost, Death and the Miser, c. 1515, Groeningenmuseum, Brugge.

One figure that could have mediated the encounters between intellectuals and craftsmen, was the poet, Latin teacher and philologist Cornelis de Schrijver (Grapheus)(1482-1558), a collaborator of Erasmus printer Dirk Martens. In 1520, he became secretary to the city of Antwerp.

Printers and editors played a key role in the Renaissance as they where the key middlemen between intellectuals, erudites and scholars on the one side, and illustrators, engravers, painters and craftsmen on the other side.

As Dürer himself, he was attracted to the ideas of the Reformation of which they considered both Luther and Erasmus to be leading voices. What is known is that Grapheus bought Dürer a copy of Luther’s De Captivitate (On the Babylonian Captivity of the Church), a must read for anyone having interest in the reform of the Church.

Just as Erasmus and many other humanists, Dürer is also said to have been the guest of Quinten Matsys in the latter’s fabulous house in the Schuttershofstraat, decorated with Italianate decorations (festoons of leaves, flowers or fruit) and grotesques (decorative and symmetric network of lines and figures).

An idealized representation of the Dürer-Matsys encounter (with Thomas More and Erasmus looking on) can be seen in a painting of Nicaise de Keyser (1813-1887) at the Royal Museum of Arts of Antwerp.

Another scene, an 1889 drawing by Godfried Guffens (1823-1901) shows the Antwerp Alderman Gerard van de Werve receiving Albrecht Dürer presented to him by Quinten Matsys.

When Charles V returned from Spain and visited Antwerp, Grapheus wrote a panegyric to welcome his return. But in 1522, he was arrested for heresy, taken to Brussels for interrogation and imprisonment. As a result, he lost his position as secretary. In 1523, he was released and returned to Antwerp, where he became a Latin teacher. In 1540, he was reinstated as secretary of the city of Antwerp.

Quentin Matsys’ own sister Catherine and her husband suffered at Leuven in 1543 for what had become the capital offense of reading the Bible since 1521: he being decapitated, she allegedly buried alive in the square before the church.

Because of their religious convictions, the Matsys children left Antwerp and went into exile in 1544. Cornelis ended his life somewhere abroad.

5. The Erasmus connection

In 1499, Thomas More and Erasmus met in London. Their initial meeting turned into a lifelong friendship as they continued to correspond on a regular basis during which time they worked collaboratively to translate into Latin and have printed some of the works of the Assyrian satirist, Lucian of Samosata (c. 125-180 AD), erroneously called « The Cynic. »

Erasmus translated Lucian’s satirical text The Dependant Scholar and had it send to his friend Jean Desmarais, a Latin teacher at the University of Louvain and a canon at Saint Peter’s Church in that city.

Lucian blasts scholars that sell their soul, mind and body to the ruling oligarchy:

In a real manifesto against voluntary servitude, Lucian goes after their personal corruption and the real reasons for their selling out:

It was through his meeting with Erasmus that Thomas More got introduced to Erasmus’ friend, Pieter Gillis (1486-1533), a fellow humanist and town secretary of Antwerp. It was Erasmus who suggested that Gilles meet Thomas More. The meeting took place in Antwerp in 1515, when More was sent on a diplomatic mission by King Henry VIII to settle some major international commercial disputes.

Gillis, who started as a seventeen year-old proofreader in Dirk Martens print shop in Leuven, met Erasmus in 1504. The humanist gave him the advice to study further and they kept in contact. Printer Martens had edited in Leuven several humanist’s books, most notably those of Denis the Carthusian (1401-1471) and Rudolphus Agricola’s De inventione dialectica (1515) the higher-education manual most widely bought, and used in schools and universities throughout Europe.

Just as More and Erasmus, Gilles was an admirer of the latter’s teacher at the Deventer school of the Brothers of the Common Life, Agricola, a great pedagogue, musician, builder of church organs, a poet in Latin and the vernacular, a diplomat, a boxer and a Hebrew scholar towards the end of his life.

Gillis‘ house in Antwerp was an important meeting place for humanists, diplomats and artists with international allure. Quinten Matsys is also a gladly seen guest. Gilles also recommended the painter Hans Holbein the Younger, who had illustrated Erasmus In Praise of Folly, to the court of England, where Thomas More received him delighted. His brother Ambrosius Holbein (1494-1519), would later illustrate Erasmus’ and More’s Utopia.

6. Thomas More’s Utopia

Pages of Utopia with the alphabet invented by Pieter Gillis.

Gilles shared with More and Erasmus a great sensitivity to justice, as well as a typically humanist sensibility devoted to the search for more established sources of truth. As a matter of fact, he is best known as a character in Utopia, a famous book in whose first pages Thomas More presents him as a model of civility and a humanist who was both pleasant and seriousness:

Entrance of house Den Spieghel, Antwerp, where Pieter Gilles lived in 1505

Thomas More’s most famous composition was of course his two-volume work entitled Utopia. It is a depiction of a fictional island that was not ruled by an oligarchy as most western states and empires, but ruled on the basis of the ideas of the good and the just Plato formulated in his dialogue, the Republic.

While ErasmusIn Praise of Folly called for a reform of the Catholic Church, Erasmus’ and More’s Utopia, satirizing the corruption, greed, cupidity and failings they saw all around them, called for the reform of the State and Economy.

The whole idea of the book came to Thomas More whilst he was staying at the Antwerp residence of Gillis, Den Spieghel, in 1515.

In the first volume, entitled Dialogue of Counsel, it begins with correspondence between More himself and others, including Pieter Gillis. On his return to England in 1516, the English humanist wrote the main part of the work and the first edition was completed and edited by Erasmus and published in Leuven.

The first edition contained a woodcut map map of the island of Utopia, verses by Gillis and the “Utopian alphabet” the latter invented for the occasion, verses of Geldenhouwer, an historian and reformer educated by the Brothers of the Common Life in Deventer and Grapheus, and Thomas More’s epistle dedicating the work to Gillis.

Several years after More‘s and Erasmus’ death, in 1541, Grapheus, with Pieter Gilles, published his Enchiridio Principis Ac Magistratus Christiani.

7. Pieter Gillis and the “Friendship Diptych”

Besides triptychs and religious paintings, Matsys also excelled in portraits. One of the most beautiful works of Matsys is the double portrait of Erasmus and his friend Gillis, painted in 1517. This friendship diptych would act as a “virtual” visit to their English friend Thomas More in London and they approached Quinten Matsys to carry out the two paintings as he was the leading Antwerp painter at that time.

Erasmus’ portrait was the first to be completed because the portrait of Gillis was constantly being delayed due to him falling ill during the sittings. The two men had told Thomas More about the paintings which may not have been a wise move as More constantly queried them as to the progress of the paintings and became very impatient to receive the gift. The two works were finally completed and were sent to More whilst he was in Calais.

Both learned educated men, although they are portrayed on separate panels, are presented in one continuous study area. Erasmus is busy writing and Pieter Gillis points to a book (not yet published) by the humanist, the Antibarbari, while he holds a letter from More in his left hand. The presentation in a study room makes one think of presentations of St. Hieronymus study room, who with his bible translation is an example for all humanists and whose work Erasmus had just published.

If you look closely, in the folds of Erasmus’ cloak you can just make out a purse. It could be that Erasmus wanted the artist to include this in order to illustrate his generosity. Erasmus and Gillis made a point of informing Thomas More that they had split the cost of the painting because they wanted it to be a present from them both. If you look at the two paintings side by side then one can see that Matsys has cleverly continued the bookcase behind the two sitters and this gives the impression that the two men depicted in the two separate panels occupy the same room and are facing each other.

It is interesting to look at the books on the shelves in the background. On the upper shelf of the Erasmus painting there is a book which has the inscription Novum Testament which alludes to Novum Testamentum Graece, the first published edition of the Greek New Testament produced by Erasmus in 1516.

On the lower shelf there is a stack of three books. The bottom tome has the inscription Hieronymus which refers to Erasmus’s edition of St Jerome; in the middle, there is a book with the inscription Lucian and refers to Erasmus and Thomas More’s collaboration in translating Lucian’s satirical Dialogues. The inscription on the book on top of these three is the word Hor, which originally read Mor. The first letter was probably altered during an early restoration, for besides Mor being the first letters of Thomas More’s surname they almost certainly refer to the satirical essays written by Erasmus whilst staying with Thomas More in his London home in 1509 and entitled Encomium Moriae (Praise of Folly). This collection of essays was considered one of the most notable works of the Renaissance.

We see Erasmus writing in a book. This depiction has been carefully thought out for the words one sees on the page paper are a paraphrase of St Paul’s Epistle to the Romans, the handwriting is a careful replication of Erasmus’s own hand, and the reed pen he holds was known to be Erasmus’s favorite writing tool.

Thomas More let his pleasure about these portraits be known in many letters, the paintings being executed, « with such a great virtuosity that all painters from Antiquity pale in comparison », while confessing once he would have preferred his image carved in (far more immortal) stone.

8. The Da Vinci connection (I)

Several paintings clearly prove that Matsys and his circle had extensive knowledge and took some of their inspiration from some of Leonardo da Vinci’s paintings and drawings without necessarily fully comprehending its full and far ranging scientific and philosophical content.

Such is clearly the case in the Virgin and child (1513, Poznan, Poland), literally presenting in front of a Patinir style mountain landscape, the gracious loving pose of Mary embracing the Christ with the latter embracing the lamb, directly a copy of Da Vinci’s Saint Anna and the Virgin (1503-1517), one of the works Leonardo had brought to Amboise in France in 1517.

As said before, it is not known how this “form” came to the attention of the master, be it prints, drawings or other.

Quinten Matsys, The Lamentation of Christ (1508-1511), Antwerp.

A second example can be seen in The Lamentation of Christ (1508–1511), a vast triptych painted for the chapel of the Carpenter Corporation in the Cathedral of Our Lady in Antwerp (Koninklijk Museum voor Schone Kunsten, Antwerp). Both John the Baptist and John the Evangelist, which appear when the triptych is closed, were there patron saints.

The central scene of the open triptych, which is reminiscent of Rogier van der Weyden’s The Descent from the Cross (1435 Museo del Prado, Madrid), is supported by the landscape. The religious drama is considered in detail and harmoniously staged.

Détail of Saint-John (left) in tears.

At the same time, Matsys approaches the great importance of the believers for the narration and the description. If the scene is conducive of reflection and prayer. Matsys uses the science of contrast. If some of the figures, especially the oriental heads, could have been inspired by the many exotic faces the painter would have seen around him in the world trade hub that was Antwerp in his days, the graceful faces of those struck with pain and sorrow are extremely beautiful.

In the middle panel, we see not the suffering, but the lament after the suffering. It depicts the moment at which Joseph of Arimathea comes to ask the Virgin for her permission to bury Christ’s body. Behind the central action is the hill of Golgotha, with its few trees, the cross and the crucified thieves.

The left wing panel shows the martyrdom of John the Evangelist and Salome presenting John the Baptist’s head to the Roman Jewish Client King Herod the Great.

The right hand panel is a scene of extraordinary cruelty, depicting St John, his body plunged into a cauldron of boiling oil. The saint, who is naked from the waist up, seems almost angelic, as if he were not suffering. Around him is a crowd of sadistic faces, ugly boors in garish clothes. The one exception to this rule is the figure of a young Flemish boy, maybe a representation of the painter himself, who is watching the scene from above in a tree.

Now the faces of those surrounding St John the Baptist and also the two main figures heating up the cauldron are directly taken or inspired by a drawing of Leonardo called the Five Grotesque Heads.

Flemish irony and humor gave a great welcome to that of Leonardo!

In Leonardo’s case, the faces even seem as breaking up in hilarious laughter, when looking at each other and at the central figure with a crown on his head. The leaves of the crown are not those of laurels to celebrate poets and heroes, but leaves of an oak tree. At that time, the anti-humanist and war mongering pope was Julius II, which Rabelais put in hell. Julius was a member of a powerful Italian noble family, the House of Della Rovere, literally “of the oak tree”…

Five grotesque heads, Leonardo da Vinci.

D. The Science of Erasmian Grotesque

1. In religious painting

The use of grotesque heads expressing the low passions that overwhelm and dominate evil persons was common practice in religious paintings to create contrast of expression.

In 1505, Dürer went to Venice and also to the university city of Bologna to learn about perspective and then journeyed further south to Florence, where he saw the work of Leonardo da Vinci and the young Raphael, and to Rome.

Christ Among Doctors, Dürer, Thyssen Bornemisza Collection, Madrid.

Christ Among the Doctors, 1506, was painted in Rome in five day’s time and reflects the influence of Leonardo‘s grotesques. Dürer was back in Venice early in 1507 before returning to Nuremberg in the same year.

Christ carrying the Cross, after 1510, Hieronymus Bosch, Ghent.

Hieronymus Bosch’s Christ carrying the cross (after 1510, Ghent) is another famous example. Christ’s head is surrounded by a dynamic group of grotesque “tronies” or faces. Was Bosch inspired by Leonardo and Matsys, or was it the other way around?

While the composition may seem chaotic at first glance, its structure is actually very rigid and formal. Christ’s head is positioned precisely at the intersection of two diagonals. The beam of the cross forms one diagonal, with the figure of Simon of Cyrene helping carry the cross at the top left, and with the “bad” murderer to the bottom right.

The other diagonal connects the imprint of Christ’s face on Veronica’s sudarium at the bottom left with the penitent thief, at the top right. He is attacked by an evil charlatan or a Pharisee and an evil monk, a clear allusion by Bosch to the religious fanaticism of his era. The grotesque heads remind us of the masks that are often used in passion plays as well as of Leonardo da Vinci’s caricatures.

By way of contrast, the softly modeled face of Christ is serene. He is the Suffering Christ, who has been abandoned by everyone and who shall triumph over all evil in the world. This representation ties in perfectly with the ideas of the Devotio Moderna.

Quinten Matsys, Christ carrying the Cross, 1510-1515, Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam.
Quinten Matsys, Ecce Homo, 1526, Venice.

Quinten Matsys, in his Ecce Homo’s (1526, Venice, Italy) cleary bases his work on the Bosch‘ tradition.

2. Misers, bankers, tax collectors and money-changers, the fight against usury

The Purchase Agreement (1515, Berlin), Quinten Matsys. A good « deal » between bankers, lawyers, theologians and misers on the one side, and a fool on the other side, maybe a contract for an « indulgence »?

Directly relevant to Erasmus’ and More’s religious, philosophical, sociological and political critique, and certainly with some relevance for today, Matsys’ denunciation of usury and greed.

Marlier keenly sketches how usurers and speculators became dominant players of Antwerp’s economic life.

Under those circumstances, notes Marlier, with everybody over their neck into debt and in urgent need for cash, usurers found a fantastic market to prosper.

The Misers (and their victims) (1520, Galleria Doria Pamphilj, Rome), Quinten Matsys.

Abroad, the Fuggers and Welsers duly participated in the emerging trade of enslaved people from Africa.

Manillas used by the european bankers to buy slaves in Africa.

The Fuggers used their mines in Eastern Europe and Germany to produce manillas – metal objects of exchange that have gone down in history as a “slave trade currency” due to their use on the coasts of West Africa. The Welsers, in turn, attempted to establish a colony in what is now Venezuela (Spanish name derived from the Italian Venezziola, “little Venice”, which became Welserland) and shipped more than 1,000 enslaved Africans to America. Meanwhile, in the homes of prosperous Augsburg citizens, enslaved people from India were forced to toil for their “masters”.

Carl Ludwig Friedrich Becker, Anton Fugger burns Charles V’s debt titles, 1866.

According to the official Fugger family website, the story that Anton Fugger threw his promissary notes into the fire in 1530, in front of Charles V, in order to generously waive repayment of loans, is pure fiction. But he did grant the new emperor a proverbial “haircut”. In exchange Charles V abandoned his plans for an “imperial monopoly law” that would have massively curtailed the scope of action of the banking and trading houses in the Holy Roman Empire.

According to Fugger researcher Richard Ehrenberg, the story about Anton didn’t emerge until the late 17th century, presumably to demonstrate his loyalty to the Emperor.

Thomas More and Erasmus exposed the rise of predatory and criminal financial abuse in their book Utopia. Erasmus, while not refusing the rise of modern entrepreneurial capitalism, denounces the abuses of financial greed.

Civil servants, he argued in his Education of a Christian Prince written for Charles V, should be recruited on the basis of their competence and merit, and not because of their glorious name or social status.

For Erasmus, (speaking through the mouth of Folly):

Quinten Massys, Tax Collectors, late 1520s, oil on panel, 86 x 71 cm.
Liechtenstein Collection, Vaduz.

One can, as Silver argues, on the basis of what’s written in the records and the fact that tax collection was outsourced to private individuals, rebrand Quinten Matsys’ painting, often referred to as The Misers, as the more « factually exact » name of Tax Collectors. However, that doesn’t change the fact the subject is precisely what exposes an old Netherlandish proverb of the period:

While the municipal financial officer on the left seems « reasonable » since his face is not “grotesque”, the man sitting behind, in a strange turn of his arm protecting a leather purse, shows the grotesque, ugly face of greed, justified by what he declared and was noted in the records. The complicity between both men is the real ugliness of the story.

Money-changers, admits Silver, often performed the same role as bankers, citing economic historian Raymond de Roover. Moreover, the unrepresented fourth scoundrel, the miller (a target in Bosch’s and Brueghel’s paintings), was often castigated because grain prices became a chronic sore spot in eras of fluctuating commodity prices, as was true in just this period.

Considering the fact that financial looting became dominant after the 1520s, such denunciations of financial greed could not but become very popular. The satirical subject was taken up almost immediately by the painter’s son Jan Matsys (1510-1575), copied close to identically by Marinus van Reymerswaele (1490-1546), and by Jan Sanders van Hemessen (1500-1566).

Quinten Matsys, The Money Changer and His Wife, 1514, Louvre, Paris.
Jacob Fugger (the Rich), by Lorenzo Lotto.

In a more “civilized” version of this metaphor, starting from the same theme, there is Matsys’ famous Banker (or Money Changer) and His Wife (1514, Louvre, Paris).

In a chapter of his opus majus Flemish Primitives entitled The Heirs of the Founders, Erwin Panofsky considers Matsys’ The Money Changer and his Wife to be a “reconstruction” of a “lost work by Jan van Eyck (a ‘painting with half-body figures, depicting a boss doing his accounts with his employee’), which Marcantonio Michiel claims to have seen in the Casa Lampugnano in Milan.”

Once again, it is not a double portrait of a banker of his wife, but a moralizing metaphor. While the banker, who has attached his prayer beads on the wall behind him, is cross-checking if the weight of the metal of the coins correspond to their nominal value, his wife, turning the pages of a religious hour book, throws a sad look at the greedy obsessions of her visibly unhappy husband.

The banker has, besides the scales he’s using, attached a pair of them to the wall behind him. For the Christian Humanists, the weight of material wealth is the opposite of that of spiritual richness. In Van der Weyden’s Last Judgment in Beaune, France, the painter ironically shows an angel weighing the resurrected souls, sending the heaviest of them… to hell.

Others speculate the banker’s wife is not completely unaffected by all the coins on the table but the attention of her eyes goes more to the hands of her husband than to the objects on the table. Piety or the pleasure of wealth? A fruit on the shelve (apple of orange), juste above her husband, might be a reference to the forbidden fruit but the estinguished candle on the shelve behind herself recalls the shortness of earthly pleasures.

Tax collector and his wife (1539, Prado, Madrid), Marinus van Reymerswaele.

When Marinus van Reymerswaele copies this theme, the woman’s temptation for the money on the table seems even bigger.

Detail with convexe mirror.

The convex mirror (who disappears in the copies made by Matsys’ followers), operating as a “mise en abîme” (a play in the play or a painting in a painting), shows a man (the banker?), reading himself a (religious?) book. The mirror not necesseraly shows some existing real space but can very will represent an imaginary time sequence outside that of the space-time of the main scene. It might show the banker in his future life, free from greed, reading a religious book with great fervor.

While the use of image of convex mirrors (whose optical laws were examined in depth by arab scientists such as Ibn al-Haytham and studied by Franciscans at Oxford such as Roger Bacon) reminds both Van Eyck’s Arnolfini couple (National Gallery, London) and Petrus Christus (1410-1475) Goldsmith in his workshop or Saint Eligius (1449, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York), with a couple standing behind, Matsys’ painting, is a unique creation of its kind.

In terms of content, the painting could also be related to a common theme at that period, namely The Calling of Saint Matthew.

The above passage is probably autobiographical in that it describes the Matthew’s call to follow Jesus as an apostle. As we know, St. Matthew responded positively to Jesus’ call and became one of the Twelve Apostles.

The Calling of Saint-Matthew (1536, Alte Pincacoteca, Munich), Jan van Hemessen.

According to the Gospel, Matthew’s name was originally Levi, a tax collector serving Herod and therefore not very popular. The Romans forced the Jewish people to pay taxes. Tax collectors were known to cheat the people by charging more than required and pocketing the difference. Of course, once Levi accepted the call to follow Jesus, he was pardoned and given the name Matthew, meaning “Yahweh’s gift.”

The Calling of Matthew (1530, Thyssen Bornemisza, Madrid), Marinus van Reymerswaele.

This theme of course could not but have pleased Erasmus, since it doesn’t insist on punishment but on positive transformation for the better. Both Marinus van Reymerswaele (in 1530) and Jan van Hemessen (in 1536), who copied and were inspired by Matsys, took up the subject as The calling of Saint-Matthew showing Jesus (on the right) calling on a tax collector to abandon his profession. In Van Hemessen’s painting we also see, just as in Matsys’ work, the wife of the tax-collector standing in front, also with her hand on an open book.

The good news is that, till now, the most generally accepted hypothesis as to the meaning of this painting is that it is an allegorical and moralizing work, on the theme of the vanity of earthly goods in opposition to timeless Christian values, and a denunciation of avarice as a cardinal sin.

3. The Da Vinci connection (II)

Leonardo da Vinci, five grotesque heads, around 1494, Windsor collection.
Quiten Matsys, détail of the right panel of Lamentation, 1508-1511, Antwerp Politically, to be noted, the Habsburg double-eagle Imperial flag waved by those executing Saint-John…

To sum it up, so far three elements of Matsys’ work have enabled us to establish his deep links with Italy and Leonardo.

1. His expertise knowledge of perspective, in particular that of Piero della Francesca, as demonstrated by the Italian-style marble vault appearing in the Altarpiece of Saint Anne.

2. His use of Leonardo’s grotesque heads, in his Triptych of the Lamentation of Christ.

3. His reworking of the Virgin’s pose from Leonardo’s Saint Anne and the Virgin, in his
Virgin and Child at the Poznan Museum.

How this influence came about remains to be elucidated. Several hypotheses,
which may complement each other, are possible:

1. At an early age, he traveled to Italy (Milan, Venice, etc.), where he may have established direct contact with Leonardo, or with one or more of his pupils.

2. He was able to exchange ideas and prints with other artists who had made such trips
and had established contacts in Italy. Whether Dürer, who had his own contacts in Italy, might have acted as an intermediary is another hypothesis to be explored. Some of Dürer’s anatomical drawings are said to have been made after Leonardo. Jacopo de’ Barbari had painted a portrait of Luca Pacioli, the Franciscan friar who had helped Leonardo to read Euclid in Greek. Dürer had met Barbari in Nuremberg, but, as we saw above, their relationship soured.

Anatomical study (2017; Dresden notebooks) by Dürer, based on Leonardo.
Probable portrait of the young Leonardo, Verrocchio’s study for his David.

3. He was able to see reproductions made and distributed by Italian and northern artists. Although the original drawings and manuscripts were copied and sold by Melzi, Leonardo’s pupil, after his master’s death in Amboise in 1519, Leonardo’s influence on Matsys appeared as early as 1507.

Leonardo’s work captivated the attention of many in Europe. For example, a life-size replica of Leonardo’s Last Supper fresco was purchased in 1545 by the Norbertine Abbey in Tongerlo, Belgum. Andrea Solario (1460-1524), a pupil of Leonardo da Vinci, is said to have created the work with other artists. Recent research suggests that Leonardo may have painted parts of the replica himself. Professor Jean-Pierre Isbouts and a team of scientists from the Imec research institute examined the canvas using multispectral cameras, which can reconstruct the different layers of a painting and distinguish restorations from the original. According to the researchers, one figure in particular catches the eye. John, the apostle to Jesus’ left, is painted using a special “sfumato” technique. This is the same technique used to paint the Mona Lisa, and one that only Leonardo mastered, says Isbouts.

Similarly, Joos Van Cleve, in the lower part of his Lamentation (1520-1525), repeats the composition of Leonardo’s Last Supper, showing that the image was known to most northern painters.

Moreover, as Silver keenly points out, one of those same heads, a near-profile but reversed from its Leonardo model (the head on the left), reappears for the lustful old man in Matsys’ later “Ill-Matched Lovers » !

The fact that it appears as a mirror image might be the result of Matsys working from a print. The engraver copies the « positive » image, but whet it is prited it appears as « negative ». In other words, as a mirror image of the original.

But also a study by Leonardo of a (not grotesque) head of an Apostle for the Last Supper, shows features close to those used by Matsys.

A life-sized replica of Leonardo’s Last Supper fresco, has been owned since 1545 by the Norbertijnen abbey in Tongerlo. Andrea Solario (1460-1524) a student of Da Vinci, would have created the work with fellow artists.

However, according to recent research, it seems that Da Vinci painted parts of the replica himself. Professor Jean-Pierre Isbouts, together with a team of scientists from Imec research institute, went over the canvas with multispectral cameras, that can reconstruct the different layers in a painting, and distinguish the restorations from the original.

One figure specifically catches the eye, according to Isbouts. John, the apostle on Jesus’ left side is painted with the special ‘sfumato’ technique. This is the same technique used to paint the Mona Lisa, and Da Vinci himself was the only artist that had mastered it, claims Isbouts.

Life-size replica of Leonardo’s Last Supper fresco, done before the master’s death, belonging to the Abbey of Tongerlo in Belgium since 1545.

Also Joos Van Cleve, in the lower section of his Lamentation (1520-1525), bases himself on Leonardo’s Last Supper, showing clearly the image was well-known to most painters in the North.

4. The Art of Grotesque per se

Da Vinci’s work on “grotesque heads” dates at least from the early Milan period (1490s) and later when he started looking for a model to paint “Judas” in the Last Supper fresco (1495-1498). Leonardo reportedly used the likenesses of people in and around Milan as inspiration for the painting’s figures. When the painting was nearly finished, Leonardo still was lacking a model for Judas. It’s said that he loitered around jails and with Milanese criminals to find an appropriate face and expression for Judas, the fourth figure from the left and the apostle who ultimately betrayed Jesus. He advised artists to always carry a notebook to draw people around town, “quarreling or laughing or fighting”. He took note of outlandish faces on the piazza, because in another note recommending sketching strangers, he adds:

When the convent’s prior complained to Ludovico Sforza of Leonardo‘s « laziness » as he wandered the streets to find a criminal to base Judas on, Leonardo responded that if he could find no one else, the prior would make a suitable model… While the painting was being executed, Leonardo’s friend, the mathematician Lucia Pacioli, was around and in contact with the master.

For the Italian scientist, always keen to explore the dynamic of contrasts of nature, exploring the ugly was not only a game but inherent to the role of the artist:

Italian scholar Sara Taglialagamba notes that the grotesque, being abnormal or “out of norm”, in the works of Leonardo is conceived as “the opposite of balance and harmony” but “not to oppose beauty.”

The deformities that connote Leonardo’s figures affect both men and women, are present in the young and the old (although on the latter they are concentrated for the most part), spare no portion of the body, and are often combined to give the subjects even more bestial appearances.

Geometry of Human Proportions

From his side, Dürer, now accused of « racial profiling » took very seriously the issue of understanding human proportions, considered, especially with the discovery of Vitruvius book De Architectura, as to offer the key to the right proportions for human architecture and urban planning. According to Vitruvius, « Beauty is produced by the pleasing appearance and good taste of the whole, and by the dimensions of all the parts being duly proportioned to each other. »

Dürer therefore measured all parts of the human body to establish harmonic relations among them. The variations in the proportions of faces and bodies, he concluded, obey the variations generated by geometric projections. They don’t change in terms of harmony but will appear different and even grotesque when projected from a different angle.

Both Leonardo and Dürer, and later Holbein the Younger in his painting The Ambassadors (1533, National Gallery, London), became masters in the science of “anamorphoses”, I.e. geometrical projections from tangent angles making an image hardly recognizable for the viewer looking straight to the plane surface while the image can be understood when viewed from that surprising angle.

Having such masters of “serious” beautiful forms as Leonardo or Matsys suddenly engaging in outrageous cartoon drawing may look disturbing, while it should not. All cartoons are based on metaphorical thinking and so is all great art.

Renaissance art is often assumed to be orderly and reassuring but these faces succeed the uncompromising polemics of the gargoyles of the cathedral builders, the “monsters” in the margin of so many illuminated manuscripts that Bosch invited on the forefront and anticipate those of Rabelais, Goya and Ensor. They are so distorted and out of the habitual norm that they get the label “grotesque” but they also make us smile when we, reluctantly and even with some anger, accept to look down on our own imperfections or those of our beloved we prefer not to see. We are not the icons we take for real that we see in the magazines.

In ErasmusPraise of Folly, the narrator (Folly personified), first identifies, among many other accomplishments, its own leading role in making things work that with pure logic, reason and intellect would fail, such as the ridiculous acts required to achieve human reproduction.

Hence, says Folly, “if all were thus wise you see how soon the world would be depopulated, and what need there would be of a second Prometheus, to plaster up the decayed image of mankind?”

Folly, with satirical irony, claims it is doing a great job helping especially older people to refuse dying off like animals:

5. The metaphor of the “Ill-matched Lovers”

Quinten Matsys, The Ill-matched Lovers

If Erasmus will blast with biting irony the corruption and madness of the Kings, Popes, Dukes and Princes, he will also expose with uncompromising irony the corruption affecting the common man, for example older men dropping their spouses to hook up with younger women, a practice, says Folly, “grown so common, that it is become the a-la-mode of the times.”

The pairing of unequal couples has a literary history dating back to antiquity when Plautus, a Roman comic poet from the 3rd–century BC, cautioned elderly men against courting younger ladies.

The « grotesque marriage » comes straight from the satirical literature, such as the above mentioned Ship of Fools (1494) of Sebastian Brant, which in its 52nd chapter tackles the « marriage-for-money » theme.

Besides In Praise of Folly, Erasmus dedicated in 1529 a colloquium to this theme titled The Unequal Marriage. (Box)

This Erasmian theme of the “Ill-matched Lovers,” became quite popular. According to art historian Max J. Friedlander, Matsys was the first to propagate this theme in the Low Countries.

Matsys depicts this theme by showing an older man besotted by a younger, beautiful woman. He gazes at her adoringly, not noticing that she is stealing his purse. In reality, the grotesque ugliness of the man, blinded by his lust for the young woman, corresponds to the ugliness of his soul. She, blinded by her greed, appears superficially as a “nice” girl, but in reality is abusing the naive fool. But the viewer rapidly finds out that the money she steals from the old fool, goes directly in the hands of the jester standing behind her and whose face expresses a combination of both lust and greed. In final analysis, that’s the moral, all the gain goes neither to him nor to her, but to foolishness itself (The Jester). A situation reminiscent of Bosch’s 1502 painting The Conjurer.

Matsys’ painting raises the issue of “Mutually Assured Corruption,” where, just as in geopolitics, both sides think they are winning at the expense of the other in a zero sum game. From that standpoint, the “moralistic” lesson here goes far beyond simple cheating among partners.

As said before, what were considered so far as “sins” (lust and greed) by the Church, became a subject of laughter for the humanist with the painting offering a “mirror” allowing viewers to self-reflect and to improve their own character.

Albrecht Dürer, The Ill-Matched Couple, Metropolitan Museum, New York.

The theme already appears in a copper engraving of Dürer in 1495, with the girl opening her hand to get money from his purse into her own.

Old Man and a Young Woman, 1503, Jacopo de Barbari, Philadelphia.

And in 1503, Jacopo Barbari painted a similar subject, An old man and a young woman. (Philadelphia)

Cranach the Elder, who made a trip to Antwerp in 1508, and was visibly inspired by the Leonardo style grotesques of Matsys, started mass producing paintings on this theme (including the use of Matsys reworked grotesque of Leonardo!), clearly answering the growing demand of protestant Germany, a production continued by his son Cranach the Younger.

http://eve-adam.over-blog.com/2016/03/les-couples-mal-assortis-lucas-cranach.html

Cranach will make variations on the theme, often reducing the theme to only “lust” leaving “greed” (money grabbing) out of the picture.

Of course, the uglier and the older the man, and the younger and the more beautiful the lady, the more the resulting contrast creates an emotional impact by underscoring the shocking character of the event. Cranach will playfully inverse roles and show an old woman with her maid, seducing a handsome young gentleman.

The Ill-Matched Lovers, Jan Massys.

Quinten Matsys’ son, Jan Matsys, will do his own variation on the theme, adding a new social dimension, that of poor families using their daughters as bait to trap older rich gentlemen whose wealth and money will allow the family to have a living, a theme also Goya took up.

Already in one of Cranach’s versions, the rich man has in front of him a loaf of bread on the table. But what strikes in Jan’s version, is the mother, standing behind the old foolish man, staring at the bread and the fruits on the table. If the greed and the lust remain real, Jan points to a given context which cannot simply be laughed away.

Among the many other artists that painted this theme one has to note Hans Baldung Grien (1485-1545), Christian Richter (1587-1667) and Wolfgang Krodel the Elder (1500-1561).

None of them reproduced completely the pun crafted by Matsys and most loyal to the real spirit of Erasmus, that of foolishness coming out on top winning the game, a truly laughable situation ! The Triumph of Folly!

Also here, for the face of the old foolish man, Matsys was influenced by sketches of grotesque heads by Leonardo.

6. Leonardo’s baby, the “Ugly Duchess

This allows us now to introduce maybe the most outrageous painting ever made, alternatively called the Old ugly woman or The ugly Duchess. Oceans of ink have been thrown on paper to speculate on her identity, her “disease” (Paget’s disease), her “gender”, most of the time to turn the eye of the viewer to a literal, “fact-based” explanation rather than enjoying and discovering the “mental” metaphor the artist paints, not on the panel, but in the mind of the viewer.

The painting has to be analyzed and understood with its pendant – an accompanying painting – which depicts an old man whose attention she solicits. In a surprise move, as a first approach, one can say that Matsys inverts the common gender roles here, since what we see is not an old man trying to seduce the girl, but an old woman trying to attract a rich old man.

–First, there is the old lady, whose physical state is ultimate decrepitude, who desperately tries to seduce an old rich man. Just as Domenico Ghirlandaio’s Old man and young boy (1490, Louvre, Paris), the person’s outside appearance prompts the audience to consider the relationship between internal and external beauty.

Once again, the obvious literary influence is Erasmus‘s essay In Praise of Folly (1511), which satirizes women who « still play the coquette », « cannot tear themselves away from their mirrors » and « do not hesitate to exhibit their repulsive withered breasts. » The woman’s clothes are rich. She is dressed to impress, including bulbous headgear that heightens her unusual features. Defying the modesty expected from older women during the Renaissance, she is wearing a low-cut, uncovered, and tightly laced bodice that emphasizes her wrinkly cleavage.

Jan Van Eyck, portrait of his wife, Margaret.

Her hair is concealed in the horns of a heart-shaped bonnet, over which she has placed a white veil, secured by a large, bejeweled brooch. However fine her attire, by the time this panel was painted in the early sixteenth century her clothes would have been many decades out of date, reminding those of Van Eyck’s portrait of his wife Margaret a century earlier, prompting laughter rather than admiration.

Her headdress had by then become an iconographic shorthand for female vanity, its horns compared to those of the devil or at best those indicating she was betrayed by her lovers (cornuto). She appears to be selling herself on her looks, for she holds a flower, often an advert for sex work in Renaissance art. It was in the tragic fate of the rose that the flight of time, and with its physical decay, found its most alarming illustration. Whether fresh or fragile, the rose, while calling for immediate pleasure, seems to protest that death is just around the corner.

Margarete Maultasch.

To identify the woman, several names are put forward. In the seventeenth century, the painting was misidentified as a portrait of Margarete Maultasch (1318-1369), who, having separated from her first husband Jean Henri de Luxembourg, remarried Louis 1er, Margrave of Brandenburg, after a thousand and one twists and turns, culminating in the couple’s excommunication by Clement VI. A complicated story in turbulent times, which earned Margarete the nickname “mouth-bag” (big mouth), or “prostitute” in Bavarian dialect. The problem is that other portraits of Margarete are known to exist, in which she appears most comely…

Defamed as the “ugliest woman in history,” she gained the nickname “The Ugly Duchess,.” In the Victorian era, this picture (or one of its many versions) inspired John Tenniel’s depiction of the Duchess in his illustrations of Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865). This entrenched the moniker and turned this figure into an icon for generations of readers.

The old man saying yes, no, or not now?

–Second, the old Man, whose fur-trimmed robe and visible gold rings, while not as demonstrably archaic or absurd as the costume of the Woman, nonetheless suggest conspicuous wealth, and his distinctive profile echoes the familiar profile of Europe’s leading merchant-banker of the fifteenth century, the late Cosimo de’ Medici of Florence.

After having played a key role as a patron of the arts and a backer of the Renaissance and the Council of Florence, became quite a disgusting figure. It has to be noted that in 1513 the warrior pope Julius II, a strong enemy of Erasmus, died and Giovanni di Lorenzo de’ Medici became pope Leo X.

The figure has also been compared to the lost portraits of the early fifteenth century of Duke Philip the Bold of Burgundy.

Jacob Fugger.

But if one takes a second look, and forgets the woman’s breasts, the viewer realizes that her face is that… of an ugly man. Maybe the whole undertaking was a political statement and the faces were those of real people whose identity we’ve not yet discovered. They might be some hated politicians or theologians of those days, selling out one to the other in an elan of greed and lust. Maybe the old ugly prostitute was a reference to fugger banker Jacob the Rich, the eternal bankroller of the increasingly bankrupt Vatican ? For the moment, let’s accept we just don’t know.

The Bohemian artist Wenceslaus Hollar (1607-1677) saw Matsys double portrait and made in 1645 an engraving of it, adding the title “King and Queen of Tunis, invented by Leonardo da Vinci, executed by Hollar.”

Engraving from Wenceslaus Hollar

In periods of carnival, when people were allowed to do away with the rules of society for a couple of days, at least in the Low Countries and the Northern Rhine area, people had a lot of fun by shifting roles. Putting things upside down, poor peasants could dress up as rich merchants, laymen as clergymen, thieves as policemen, male as female and one and all the other way around.

The original concept of this metaphor seems to have come from Leonardo, who made a tiny sketch of an ugly woman, eventually a prostitute, remarkably with the horn bonnet and a tiny flower planted between her breasts, exactly the same attributes, metaphors and symbols employed later by Matsys in his work.

Old grotesque woman, National Gallery, Washington.
Francesco Melzi?

Leonardo’s pupil Melzi and other students or followers, as they did with many other of Leonardo’s sketches, seem to have copied Leonardo’s work and, amused, counter-posed the horny woman with a greedy, wealthy Florentine merchant. Did Melzi share or sell his sketches to others?

Various amusing versions of the theme are scattered around the world and figure in private and pubic collections.

Another sketch, either by Leonardo himself of his followers, shows a wild grotesque man with his hair raising up his head, with a series of grotesque looking scholars, including one looking like Dante! Leonardo, of course, who always signed his writings with the words “man without letters,” was a mere craftsman and never taken serious by those scholars Lucian exposed for having sold out to the establishment.

All these elements that what Matsys did was nothing “bizarre” or “extravagant,” but as someone sharing a “culture” of grotesque faces whose variations could be used to express the metaphorical puns of the humanist culture.

But of course, what made his old man and woman impact so huge, was the fact that what for Leonardo were nothing but rapid sketches in a notebook, became with Matsys life-size frighteningly hyper-realistic representations!

In the Queen’s Windsor Collection, there exists a red chalk drawing of the woman nearly exactly as she appears in Matsys work.

Francesco Melzi or another pupil of Leonardo da Vinci, done after original from Quinten Matsys, Royal Collection, Windsor.

Untill very recently, historians were convinced that Quentin Matsys had “copied” this drawing of around 1490 attributed to Leonardo which he enlarged to produce his oil painting. “So Leonardo designed this unique person, even to the wrinkled bosom emerging from her dress. All Matsys did was enlarge her in oils,” it is said.

However, recent research suggests it could have been the other way around! Either Melzi, or Leonardo himself, could have made the red chalk drawing starting from Matsys painting, either from a direct view, prints or reproductions. An Italian copying a Flemish painter, can you imagine?

Leading expert Susan Foister, Deputy Director and Curator of Early Netherlandish, German and British Painting at The National Gallery, London, who was also the curator of the museums 2008 exhibit “Renaissance Faces: Van Eyck to Titian,” told The Guardian at that time : « We can now say with confidence that Leonardo – or, at least, one of his followers – copied Matsys’s wonderful painting, not the other way around. This is a very exciting discovery. »

Foister said they had discovered that Matsys made amendments as he went along, suggesting he was creating the image all by himself rather than copying a model. Also, in the two Leonardo copies, the forms of the body and clothes are oversimplified and the woman’s left eye is not in its socket. « It was always assumed that a lesser known northern European artist would have copied Leonardo and it has not really been thought that it could have been the other way round, » said Foister. She added that both artists were known to be interested in ugliness and exchanged drawings « but credit for this masterful work belongs to Matsys ».

Source: The Guardian

E. Conclusion

The conclusion writes itself. The “Seven Capital Sins” which More and Erasmus tried to eradicate five centuries ago have become the very axiomatic “values” of today’s “Western” system.

At the ground level, people are offered the “freedom” to sell out to lust, envy, greed, sloth, gluttony, etc. — all of this packed as “diversity”, on condition they don’t call into question the speculative financial and war policies that is imposed on them from a tyrannical oligarchy on the top. And those pretending to defend « european » and « judeo-christian » values will lack any credibility if they don’t take up the fight against financial oligarchism so clearly exposed by Thomas More and Erasmus.

Erasmus would turn around in his grave if he knew that his name is mainly associated with a scholarship offered by the EU for pupils willing to study in other EU member states. As Belgian professor Luc Reychler has suggested, such scholarships should include a mandatory training period in Erasmus’ thoughts and especially his advanced concepts of peace building.

In short, to make a new renaissance a reality, we have to free our fellow citizens from fear. While unaware about such real dangers as nuclear war, they live in fear of threats they have been brought to imagine. For those like us longing for peace, time has come to take Erasmus’, Leonardo’s and Matsys’ vision of “good laughter,” very, very, very seriously.

I end here with following rebus:

« D » stands for « The »; the world stands for « World »; the foot, in flemish « voet », meaning also « feeds », and the « vedel » (Vielle) also means « many », following by two happy fools. The phrase therefore reads: « The World Feeds Many Happy Fools! » And you are one of them! But don’t tell! Mondeken Toe!

Selected biography

Merci de partager !

Joachim Patinir and the invention of landscape painting

Joachim Patinir, Landscape with Saint Jerome, National Gallery, London.
Joachim Patinir (1485-1524), drawing by Albrecht Dürer, who attended Patinir’s wedding in Antwerp in 1520.

It is generally believed that the « modern » concept of landscape in Flemish painting only emerged with the work of Joachim Patinir (1485-1524), a Dinant-born painter working in Antwerp in the early 16th century.

For Viennese art historian Ludwig von Baldass (1887-1963), writing at the beginning of the 20th century, Patinir‘s work, presented as clearly ahead of its time, would herald landscape as überschauweltlandschaft, translatable as « panoramic landscape of the world », a truly cosmic and totalizing representation of the visible universe.

What characterizes Patinir‘s work, say the proponents of this analysis, is the sheer scale of the landscapes it presents for the viewer to contemplate.

This breadth has a dual character: the space depicted is immense (due to a panoramic viewpoint situated high up, almost « celestial »), while at the same time it encompasses, without concern for geographical verisimilitude, the greatest possible number of different phenomena and representative specimens, typical of what the earth can offer as curiosities, sometimes even imaginary, dreamlike, unreal, fantastic motifs: fields, woods, anthropomorphic mountains, villages and cities, deserts and forests, rainbows and storms, swamps and rivers, rivers and volcanoes.

Bayart Rock on the Meuse, near Dinant, Belgium.

For example, the « Bayart Rock », which borders the Meuse not far from Patinir‘s native town of Dinant.

In addition to this panoramic perspective, Patinir uses aerial perspective – theorized at the time by Leonardo da Vinci – by dividing the space into three color planes: brown-ochre for the first plane, green for the middle plane and blue for the distant plane.

However, the painter preserves the visibility of the totality of details with a meticulousness, minutiae and preciousness worthy of the Flemish masters of the XVth century, who, by tending towards a quantitative infinity (consisting in showing everything), sought to approach a qualitative infinity (allowing us to see everything).

For their part, the authors of the weltlandschaft thesis, after showering with praise, do not hesitate to strongly relativize his contribution, saying:

And it’s here that the trap of this approach, which consists in making us believe that the advent of landscape as an autonomous genre, its so-called « secularization », is simply the result of emancipation from a medieval and religious mental matrix, considered necessarily retrograde, for which landscape was reduced to a pure emanation or incarnation of divine power, is clearly identified.

Patinir, the first, would thus have demonstrated a purely « modern » aesthetic conception, and these « realistic » landscapes would mark the transition from a religious – and therefore obscurantist – cultural paradigm to a modern one, i.e. one devoid of meaning… which he would later be criticized for.

This is how the romantic and fantastic minds of the XVIIth and XVIIIth centuries viewed the artists of the XVth and XVIth centuries.

Von Baldass was undoubtedly influenced by the writings of Goethe, who, no doubt in a moment of enthusiasm for Greek paganism, analyzed the increasingly diminished role of religious figures in XVIth-century Flemish paintings and deduced that it was no longer the religious subject that was the subject, but the landscape.

Just as Rubens would have used the pretext of painting Adam and Eve expelled from Paradise to be able to paint nudes, Patinir would simply have seized the pretext of a biblical passage to be able to indulge his true passion, landscape…

A little detour via Hieronymus Bosch

A fresh look at Patinir’s work clearly demonstrates the error of this analysis.

To arrive at a more accurate reading, I suggest a detour to Hieronymus Bosch, whose spirit was very much alive among Erasmus‘ circle of friends in Antwerp (Gérard David, Quentin Massys, Jan Wellens Cock, Albrecht Dürer, etc.), of which Patinir was a member.

Bosch, contrary to the clichés still in vogue today, is above all a pious and moralizing spirit. If he shows vice, it’s not so much to praise it as to make us aware of just how much it attracts us. Faithful to the Augustinian traditions of Devotio Moderna, promoted by the Brothers of the Common Life (a spiritual renewal movement to which he was close), Bosch believes that man’s attachment to earthly things leads him to sin. This is the central theme of all his work, the spirit of which can only be penetrated by reading The Imitation of Christ, written, in all probability, by the founding soul of the Devotio Moderna, Geert Groote (1340-1384), or his disciple, Thomas à Kempis (1379-1471), to whom this work is generally attributed.

In this work, the most widely read in human history after the Bible, we read:

Bosch treats this subject with great compassion and humor in his painting The Hay Wagon (Prado Museum, Madrid).

Hieronymus Bosch, The Hay Chariot Altarpiece, central panel, reference to the vanity of earthly riches. Prado Museum, Madrid.

The allegory of straw already exists in the Old Testament. Isaiah 40:6 :

It was echoed in the New Testament by the apostle Peter (1:24):

Johannes Brahms uses this passage in the second movement of his German Requiem.

Bosch‘s triptych depicts a hay wagon, an allegory of the vanity of earthly riches, pulled by strange creatures on their way to hell.

The Duke of Burgundy, the Emperor of Germany and even the Pope himself (this is the time of Julius II…) follow close behind, while a dozen or so characters fight to the death for a blade of straw. It’s a bit like the huge speculative securities bubble that is leading our era into a great depression…

It’s easy to imagine the bankers who sabotaged the G20 summit to perpetuate their system, which is so profitable in the very short term. But this corruption doesn’t just affect the big boys. In the foreground of the picture, an abbot has entire sacks of hay filled, a false dentist and also gypsies cheat people for a bit of straw.

The peddler and the Homo Viator

The closed triptych sums up the same topos in the form of a peddler (not the prodigal son). This peddler, eternal homo viator, is an allegory of Man who fights to stay on the right path and insists on staying on it.

In another version of the same subject painted by Bosch (Museum Boijmans Beuningen, Rotterdam), the peddler advances op een slof en een schoen (on a slipper and a shoe), i.e. he chooses precariousness, leaving the visible world of sin (we see a brothel and drunkards) and abandoning his material possessions.

Painting by Bosch. Here, the peddler is merely a metaphor for the path chosen by the soul as it steadily detaches itself from earthly temptations. With his staff (faith), the believer repels the sin (the dog) that comes to bite his calves.

With his staff (symbol of faith), he fends off the infernal dogs (symbol of temptation), who try to hold him back.

Once again, these are not manifestations of Bosch‘s exuberant imagination, but of a metaphorical language common at the time. We find this representation in the margin of the famous Luttrell Psalter, a XIVth-century English psalter.

Luttrell Psalter, peddler with staff and infernal dog, British Library, London.

This theme of homo viator, the man who detaches himself from earthly goods, is also recurrent in the art and literature of this period, particularly since the Dutch translation of Pèlerinage de la vie et de l’âme humaine (pilgrimage of life and the human soul), written in 1358 by the Norman Cistercian monk Guillaume de Degulleville (1295-after 1358).

A miniature from this work shows a soul on its way, dressed as a peddler.

Miniature from Guillaume Degulleville’s Pèlerinage de la vie et l’âme humaine.

Nevertheless, while in the XIVth century this spiritual requirement may have dictated a sometimes excessive rigorism, the liberating laughter of nascent humanism (Brant, Erasmus, Rabelais, etc.) would bring happier, freer colors to Flemish Brabant culture (Bosch, Matsys, Bruegel), albeit later stifled by the dictates of the Council of Trent.

Man’s foolish attachment to earthly goods became a laughing matter. Published in Basel in 1494, Sébastien Brant’s Ship of Fools, a veritable inventory of all the follies that can lead man to his doom, left its mark on an entire generation, which rediscovered creativity and optimism thanks to the liberating laughter of Erasmus and his disciple, the Christian humanist François Rabelais.

In any case, for Bosch, Patinir and the Devotio Moderna, contemplation was the very opposite of pessimism and scholastic passivity. For them, laughter is the ideal antidote to despair, acedia (weariness) and melancholy.

Contemplation thus took on a new dimension. Each member of the faithful is encouraged to live out his or her Christian commitment, through personal experience and individual imitation of Christ. They must stop blaming themselves on the great figures of the Bible and Sacred History.

Man can no longer rely on the intercession of the Virgin Mary, the apostles and the saints. While following their examples, he must give personal content to the ideal of the Christian life. Driven to action, each individual, fully aware of his or her sinful nature, is constantly led to choose good over evil. These are just a few of the cultural backgrounds that enable us to approach Patinir’s landscapes in a different way.

Charon crossing the Styx

Patinir’s painting Charon Crossing the Styx (Prado Museum, Madrid), which combines ancient and Christian traditions, will serve here as our « Rosetta stone ». Inspired by the sixth book of the Aeneid, in which the Roman writer Virgil describes the catabasis, or descent into hell, or Dante‘s Inferno (3, line 78) taken from Virgil, Patinir places a boat at the center of the work.

Joachim Patinir, Charon crossing the Styx, Prado Museum, Madrid.

The tall figure standing in this boat is Charon, the Ferryman of the Underworld, usually portrayed as a gloomy, sinister old man. His task is to ferry the souls of the deceased across the River Styx.

In payment, Charon takes a coin placed in the mouths of the corpses. The passenger in the boat is thus a human soul.

Although the scene takes place after the person’s physical death, the soul – and this may come as a surprise – is tormented by the choice between Heaven and Hell.

Since the Council of Trent, it has been considered that a bad life irrevocably sends man to Hell from the moment of his death. But Christian faith continues, even today, to distinguish the Last Judgment from what is known as the « particular judgment ».

According to this concept, which is sometimes disputed within denominations, at the moment of death, although our final fate is fixed (Hebrews 9:27), all the consequences of this particular Judgment will not be drawn until the general Judgment, which will take place when Christ returns at the end of time.

So, the « particular judgment » that is supposed to immediately follow our death, concerns our last act of freedom, prepared by all that our life has been. Helping us to contemplate this ultimate moment therefore seems to be the primary aim of Patinir‘s painting, with other metaphors thrown in for good measure.

However, a closer look at the lower part of the painting reveals a contradiction that is absent from Virgil’s poem. While Hell is on the right (Cerberus, the three-headed dog guarding the gateway to Hell, can be seen), the gateway seems easily accessible, with splendid trees dotting the lawns.

To the left is Paradise. An angel tries to attract the attention of the soul in the boat, but it seems much more attracted by a seemingly welcoming Hell.

What’s more, the dimly-lit path to paradise seems perilous, with rocks, swamps and other dangerous obstacles. Once again, it’s our senses that may lead us to make a literally hellish choice.

Hercules at the crossroads, Ship of Fools, Sébastien Brant.

The subject of the painting is clearly that of the bivium, the binary choice at the crossroads that offers the pilgrim viewer the choice between the path of vice and that of salvation.

This theme was widespread at the time. We find it again in Sébastien Brant‘s Ship of Fools, in the form of Hercules at the crossroads. In this illustration, on the left, at the top of a hill, a naked woman represents vice and idleness. Behind her, death smiles down on us.

On the right, planted at the top of a higher hill, at the end of a rocky path, awaits virtue symbolized by work. Let’s also remember that the Gospel (Matthew 7:13-14) clearly evokes the choice we will face:

Landscape as an object of contemplation

The art historian Reindert Leonard Falkenburg, in his 1985 doctoral thesis, was the first to note that Patinir takes pleasure in transposing this metaphorical language to the whole of his landscape.

Although the image of impassable rocks as a metaphor for the virtue achieved by choosing the difficult path is nothing new, Patinir exploits this idea with unprecedented virtuosity.

We thus discover that the theme of man courageously turning away from the temptation of a world that traps our sensorium, is the underlying theo-philosophical theme of almost all Patinir’s landscapes. In this way, his work finds its raison d’être as an object of contemplation, where man measures himself against the infinite.Let’s return to our Landscape with Saint Jerome by Patinir (National Gallery, London).

Here we discover the « narrow gate » leading to a difficult path that takes us to the first plateau. This is not the highest mountain. The highest, like the Tower of Babylon, is a symbol of pride.

Next, let’s look at Resting on the Road to Egypt (Prado Museum, Madrid). At the side of the road, Mary is seated, and in front of her, on the ground, are the peddler’s staff and his typical basket.

Joachim Patinir, The Rest of the Holy Family, Prado Museum, Madrid.

In conclusion, we could say that, driven by his spiritual and humanist fervor, by painting increasingly impassable rocks – reflecting the immense virtue of those who decide to climb them – Patinir elaborates not « realistic » landscapes, but « spiritual landscapes », dictated by the immense need to tell the spiritual journey of the soul.

Hence, far from being mere aesthetic objects, his spiritual landscapes serve contemplation.

Like a half-ironic mirror image, they enable those who wish to do so to prepare for the choices their soul will face during, and after, life’s pilgrimage.

Bibliography:

  • R.L. Falkenburg, Joachim Patinir, Het landschap als beeld van de levenspelgrimage, Nijmegen, 1985;
  • Maurice Pons and André Barret, Patinir ou l’harmonie du monde, Robert Laffont, 1980;
  • Eric de Bruyn, De vergeten beeldentaal van Jheronimus Bosch, Adr. Heinen, s’Hertogenbosch, 2001;
  • Dirk Bax, Hieronymus Bosch, his picture-writing deciphered, A. A. Balkema, Capetown, 1979;
  • Georgette Epinay-Burgard, Gérard Groote, fondateur de la Dévotion Moderne, Brepols, 1998.
  • Karel Vereycken, Devotio Moderna, cradle of Humanism in the North, Artkarel.com, 2011;
  • Karel Vereycken, With Hieronymus Bosch on the track of the Sublime, Schiller Institute, 2007.
  • Karel Vereycken, How Erasmus Folly saved our Civilization, Schiller Institute, 2004.

Merci de partager !

Index, Études Renaissance

INDEX, Etudes Renaissance

Merci de partager !

Van Eyck : la beauté,
prégustation de la sagesse divine

Same texte, english version


Jan Van Eyck (1390-1441). Comment saisir l’intention de ce grand peintre flamand dont cinq siècles nous séparent ?

A part regarder son œuvre, voici trois pistes que j’ai tenté de débroussailler pour vous :

  • Le peintre était sans doute initié à la lectio divina , l’interprétation à plusieurs niveaux du sens profond des Saintes Ecritures ;
  • L’influence du penseur religieux français Hugues de Saint-Victor (1096-1141), une figure méconnue mais majeure dont le cardinal philosophe Nicolas de Cues a pu s’inspirer ;
  • Les conseils éventuels qu’a pu donner au peintre le théologien Denys le Chartreux (1401-1471), le confesseur de Philippe Le Bon, duc de Bourgogne, pour qui le peintre effectua des missions diplomatiques.

Par Karel Vereycken

Voici une bonne raison pour apprendre le néerlandais ! Lire dans le texte original le livre inspirant et bien écrit Landschap en Wereldbeeld, van Van Eyck tot Rembrandt (Paysage et vision du monde, de Van Eyck à Rembrandt) de l’historien d’art néerlandais Boudewijn Bakker (Paru en 2004 chez Thoth à Bossum, Pays-Bas, également disponible en anglais).

Dans un style précis et d’accès facile, Bakker nous offre une série de clés permettant au spectateur du XXIe siècle de renouveler le regard porté sur la peinture flamande et néerlandaise et de révéler son sens parfois un peu « caché »…

Ce qui parfois nous étonne aujourd’hui s’avère souvent des références largement partagées par les peintres, leurs commanditaires, les religieux et plus largement le grand public dans ces contrées.

Paradoxe

Avant de lire l’œuvre de Bakker, la peinture du Nord de l’Europe m’a souvent parue aller à l’opposé de la matrice philosophique et religieuse qui prévalait au XVe siècle, alors qu’elle en est l’expression.

Jusqu’ici, je pensais que, pour l’essentiel, la vision du monde qui prévalait à la fin du Moyen-Age se résumait au rejet du monde visible tel que nous le percevons par nos sens. Car ce monde, d’après la mésinterprétation de Saint Augustin et Platon par les scolastiques, n’est que tromperie et tentation, le diable en personne en quelque sorte.

Or, et c’est là que ce paradoxe se manifeste avec toute sa force éruptive, comment réconcilier ce rejet du visible avec en particulier l’œuvre du peintre flamand Van Eyck, qui nous montre des êtres humains animés de bonté, pleins de beauté et de douceur, entourés d’une nature belle, abondante et exubérante ?

 Adam, détail du retable de Gand (1432), Jan Van Eyck.

Comment ose-t-il, me demandais-je, nous montrer tant de beauté alors qu’à son époque la doctrine de la foi, s’érigeant en gardienne du temple, ne cessait de rappeler que l’Homme, dans son imperfection criante, n’est pas Dieu, et mettait systématiquement en garde contre les tentations de ce monde ?

Les tableaux ironiques mais extrêmement moralisateurs de Jérôme Bosch et de Joachim Patinier ne sont-ils pas là pour nous faire comprendre, avec une violence non-dissimulée mais avec humour et méthode, que l’origine du péché se trouve précisément dans notre attachement excessif aux biens terrestres et dans les plaisirs que nous croyons en tirer ?

Coïncidence des opposés

Le cardinal philosophe Nicolas de Cues (Cusanus)

Sans se référer explicitement à la méthode du grand théo-philosophe, le cardinal Nicolas de Cues, celle de la « coïncidence des opposés » (coincidentia oppositorum), c’est-à-dire la résolution de paradoxes d’apparence insolvable mais possible à partir d’un point de vue plus élevé et donc supérieur, Bakker démontre que le paradoxe que nous venons d’évoquer, n’en est, lui aussi, qu’un en apparence.

Pour comprendre cela, Bakker rappelle d’abord que pour le courant augustinien, pour qui l’homme a été créé à l’image vivante du créateur (Imago Viva Dei), la nature, n’est ni plus ni moins qu’une « théophanie », c’est-à-dire, pour ceux qui se rendent capable de la lire, la révélation d’une intention divine.

Pour ce courant, Dieu se révèle à l’homme, non pas par un seul, mais par « deux livres », dont le premier n’est autre que « le livre de la nature » qu’on apprécie par les yeux ; le deuxième étant la Bible à laquelle auquel on accède grâce aux yeux et aux oreilles.

Bakker souligne à ce propos le rôle, un peu oublié, de deux penseurs chrétiens de premier ordre qui, depuis l’hégémonie de l’aristotélisme introduit par saint Thomas d’Aquin, la montée du nominalisme et la contre-réforme, ont fini par tomber dans l’oubli.

Il s’agit en premier lieu de l’abbé et théologien français Hugues de Saint Victor (1096-1141), un des auteurs médiévaux ayant connu une large diffusion manuscrite à son époque, et de Denys le Chartreux (1402-1471), un ami néerlandais et collaborateur de Nicolas de Cues (1401-1464) et confesseur de Philippe le Bon, duc de Bourgogne (1396-1467).

Lectio divina de la nature ?

Saint-Dominique lisant. Fresque de Fra Angelico.

Par rapport à l’interprétation des peintures, l’approche de Bakker, qui en réalité a fait le travail que tout historien de l’art digne de ce nom devrait fournir avant de se livrer à des interprétations d’œuvres d’art, consiste dans la confrontation des tableaux avec, s’ils si elles existent, les écrits de leurs époques.

Dans cet exercice, Bakker formule l’hypothèse fertile que les chefs-d’œuvre de la peinture flamande, truffés d’autant d’énigmes et de mystères que nos belles cathédrales, se lisent « à plusieurs niveaux », tout comme l’exégèse biblique de l’époque faisait appel, pour les textes sacrés, à une méthode de lecture ancestrale, dite « à quatre niveaux ».

D’abord dans le judaïsme, bien avant l’arrivée de Jésus, l’étude de la Torah faisait appel à la « doctrine des quatre sens » :

  • le sens littéral,
  • le sens allégorique,
  • le sens allusif, et
  • le sens mystique (éventuellement caché, secret ou kabbalistique).

Ensuite, les chrétiens, en particulier Origène (185-254), puis Ambroise de Milan au IVè siècle, reprennent cette méthode pour la Lectio Divina, c’est-à-dire l’exercice de la lecture spirituelle visant, par la prière, à pénétrer le plus profondément possible un texte sacré.

Enfin, introduite au IVe siècle par Ambroise, Augustin fait de la Lectio Divina la base de la prière monastique. Elle sera reprise ensuite par Jérôme, Bède le Vénérable, Scot Erigène, Hugues de Saint-Victor, Richard de Saint-Victor, Alain de Lille, Bonaventure et s’imposera à Saint Thomas d’Aquin et Bernard de Clairvaux.

Bakker prend soin de préciser ces quatre niveaux de lecture :

  • Le sens littéral est celui qui est issu de la compréhension linguistique de l’énoncé. Il raconte les faits et la « petite histoire » tout en replaçant l’écrit dans le contexte de l’époque ;
  • Le sens allégorique. Vient du grec allos, autre, et agoreuein, dire. L’allégorie en énonçant une chose en dit aussi une autre. Ainsi l’allégorie explique ce que symbolise le récit ;
  • Le sens moral ou tropologique (du latin tropos signifiant « changement »), en cherchant dans le texte des figures, des vices ou des vertus, des passions ou des étapes que l’esprit humain doit parcourir dans son ascension vers Dieu, nous indique les leçons que chacun peut en tirer pour sa propre vie dans le présent ;
  • Le sens anagogique (adjectif provenant du grec anagogikos c’est-à-dire élévation), est obtenu par l’interprétation des Évangiles, afin de donner une idée des réalités dernières qui deviendront visibles à la fin des temps. En philosophie, chez Leibniz, « l’induction anagogique » est celle qui tente de remonter à une cause première.

Ces quatre sens ont été formulés au Moyen-Age dans un fameux distique latin : littera gesta docet, quid credas allegoria, moralis quid agas, quo tendas anagogia (la lettre enseigne les faits, l’allégorie ce que tu dois croire, la morale ce que tu dois faire, l’anagogie ce que tu dois viser).

La raison pour laquelle j’amène cette question de l’exégèse biblique à niveaux multiples, précise Bakker, c’est que dans le cadre de la vision du monde du Moyen-Age, on estimait que cette interprétation ne s’appliquait pas seulement à la Bible, mais tout autant à la création visible.

Gros plan de la page du livre devant lequel s’agenouille la Vierge dans l’Annonciation qui décore les volets extérieurs du retable de Gand de Jan Van Eyck (1432). En bas de la page, on lit clairement (en rouge) : « De visione dei », le titre de l’œuvre de Nicolas de Cues de 1453.

Nous voilà donc devant un sentiment amoureux de la création ? Pas du tout ! Loin du panthéisme (un péché), il s’agit de « lire », comme l’affirme Hugues de Saint-Victor, « avec les yeux de l’esprit », ce que « les yeux de la chair » ne sont pas capable de voir, un concept que reprendra Nicolas de Cues dans son œuvre de 1543 : Du tableau, ou la Vision de Dieu.

Le paradoxe se trouve ainsi résolu. Car, dans l’allégorie de la caverne évoquée par Platon dans La République, l’homme qui se trouve enchaîné devant une paroi où il ne voit que défiler des ombres projetées sur la paroi de la caverne, en mobilisant son intelligence, in fine se rend capable d’identifier les processus qui les engendrent.

Certes, l’homme ne peut pas « connaître » Dieu de façon directe. Cependant, en étudiant les effets de son action, il peut deviner son intention. C’est donc à travers Hugues de Saint Victor, que le courant augustinien et platonicien qui avait inspiré la Renaissance carolingienne refait surface à Paris.

Pour ce courant, la création comme un tout, du point de vue anagogique, est un reflet du paradis céleste et une référence directe vers l’omnipuissance, la beauté et la bonté divine.

Pour Bakker :

L’ensemble de ces interprétations sont faciles à illustrer avec les œuvres d’Augustin, parce qu’elles ont inspiré tout au long du Moyen-Age les auteurs sur la nature. Augustin aimait beaucoup le monde tel qu’il se présente à nous ; il savait jouir de ce qu’il appelait ‘certains espaces larges et magnifiques de la ville ou de la campagne’, où la beauté vous frappe avec éclat lorsque vous les montrez à un étranger. Mais la création contient également d’innombrables messages ‘moraux’, autant d’occasions pour un observateur pieux et attentif pour réfléchir sur son âme et sa tâche sur Terre. Coup après coup, Augustin souligne cet aspect lorsqu’il parle des phénomènes naturels. Chaque fois, il nous incite à chercher l’invisible derrière le visible, l’éternel derrière le temporel, etc. Ainsi l’harmonie que nous montre la création nous indique la paix qui doit régner entre les hommes. Chaque créature, pris séparément, apparait, pour celui qui veut le voir comme un exemple (négatif ou positif) pour l’homme. Ceci s’applique notamment pour le comportement des animaux, par exemple. Et ce qui concerne la Terre comme un tout, ne négligez pas les creux du paysage, car c’est là que jaillissent les sources.

Hugues de Saint Victor

Hugues de Saint Victor

En France, c’est lors de la Renaissance intellectuelle du XIIe siècle que les centres d’étude scolaires se multiplient (école cathédrale, école d’Abélard, école du Petit-Pont pour Paris, Chartres, Laon…) et qu’une véritable effervescence intellectuelle fait de notre pays un pôle d’attraction. Ainsi, de nombreux étudiants en provenance d’Allemagne, d’Italie, d’Angleterre, d’Ecosse et du Nord de l’Europe partent pour Paris pour y étudier avant tout la dialectique et la théologie.

Hugues de Saint Victor (1096-1141) est d’origine saxonne (ou flamande ?). Vers 1127, il entre chez les chanoines réguliers de Saint-Victor peu après la fondation de ce monastère installé à la lisière de Paris.

Les Victorins se distinguent dès l’origine par la haute place qu’ils donnent à la vie intellectuelle. Les chanoines de cette abbaye ont un regard positif sur le savoir, d’où l’importance qu’ils accordent à leur bibliothèque.

Les maîtres principaux qui ont influencé Hugues sont : Raban Maur (lui-même disciple du conseiller de Charlemagne, l’irlandais Alcuin), Bède le Vénérable, Yves de Chartres et Jean Scot Erigène et quelques autres, peut-être-même Denys l’Aréopagite dont il commente La Hiérarchie céleste.

Abbaye de Saint Victor à Paris en 1655.

D’une curiosité intellectuelle insatiable, Hugues conseille à ses disciples de tout apprendre car, dit-il, rien n’est inutile. Lui-même est le premier à mettre en pratique le conseil qu’il donne aux autres. Une partie notable de ses écrits est consacrée aux arts libéraux, aux sciences et à la philosophie, dont il traite en particulier dans un manuel d’introduction aux études profanes et sacrées, demeuré célèbre, le Didascalicon.

Ses contemporains le considèrent comme le plus grand théologien de leur temps et lui donnent le titre glorieux de « nouvel Augustin ». Il influence les Franciscains d’Oxford (Grosseteste, Roger Bacon, etc.) dont l’influence sur le peintre Roger Campin n’est plus à démontrer et Nicolas de Cues s’en inspire.

À la question de savoir s’il faut admirer ou mépriser le monde, Hugues de Saint Victor répond qu’on doit aimer le monde, mais à condition de ne pas oublier qu’il faut l’aimer en vue de Dieu, comme un présent de Dieu, et non pour lui-même.

Pour atteindre cette sagesse, l’homme doit considérer son existence comme celle celui d’un pèlerin qui se détache sans cesse de l’endroit où il réside, métaphore très fertile qu’on retrouvera chez les peintres flamands Bosch et Patinier. « Le monde entier est un exil pour ceux qui philosophent », souligne Hugues.

Maître Hugues pose l’exigence d’un dépassement de la dilectio (amour jaloux et possessif de Dieu) pour la condilectio (amour accueillant et ouvert au partage). Il prône l’idée d’un amour tout agapique tourné vers les autres, et non centré sur soi-même, un amour tourné vers le prochain, l’amour de Dieu augmentant avec l’amour du prochain. C’est tout simplement l’idée de charité chrétienne et de solidarité fraternelle qui est ainsi exprimée.

Hugues énumère cinq exercices spirituels : la lecture, la méditation, la prière, l’action, la contemplation. La première donne la compréhension ; la seconde fournit une réflexion ; la troisième demande, la quatrième cherche et la cinquième trouve. Ces exercices ont pour but d’atteindre la source de la vérité et de la charité et là, l’âme de l’homme est toute « transformée en flamme d’amour », reposant entre les mains de Dieu dans « une plénitude à la fois de connaissance et d’amour ».

Pour le sujet qui nous intéresse ici, c’est surtout sa vision optimiste de l’homme et de la création qui se différencie des clichés que nous retenons du pessimisme médiéval. Car pour lui, la création est un don de Dieu et le chemin vers Dieu passe donc tout autant par la lecture du livre de la nature que par la Bible.

Ainsi, pour lui, l’image que nous en percevons n’est d’abord que révélation ou dévoilement de la Puissance divine, perçue « à travers la longueur, la largeur, la profondeur de l’espace », « à travers la masse des montagnes, la longueur des fleuves, l’étendue des champs, la hauteur du ciel, la profondeur de l’abîme ».

Ainsi, le peintre, lorsqu’il excelle dans la représentation de l’univers physique ne fait qu’augmenter sa capacité à dévoiler la puissance du créateur !

Dévoilement également de la Sagesse à travers la beauté. Pour Hugues, « tout l’univers sensible est un grand livre tracé par le doigt de Dieu », c’est-à-dire créé par la vertu divine et

chaque créature est comme une figure, non pas produit du désir humain, mais fruit du vouloir divin chargé de manifester la Sagesse invisible de Dieu (…) Tout comme un illettré regarde les signes d’un livre ouvert sans connaître les lettres, un homme stupide et bestial ‘qui ne comprend pas les choses qui sont de Dieu’, ne voit dans les créatures que la forme extérieure, mais n’en comprend pas le sens intérieur.

Pour s’élever, Hugues propose à ses disciples de Saint-Victor, à tous ceux capables de « contempler sans relâche », de poser « un regard spirituel » sur le monde. Pour son disciple, Richard de Saint-Victor, la Bible et le grand livre de la nature {« rendent le même son et s’harmonisent pour dire les merveilles d’un monde secret. »}

Denys le Chartreux, clé pour comprendre Van Eyck

Le théologien Denys le Chartreux (Van Rykel).

Deux siècles après Hugues de Saint-Victor, c’est une même flamme qui anime le théologien Denys le Chartreux (1401-1471), originaire du Limbourg belge. Sous le titre La beauté du monde : ordo et varietas, Bakker lui consacre tout un chapitre de son livre. Et vous allez comprendre pourquoi.

Avant d’entrer chez les Chartreux de Roermond aux Pays-Bas, Denys, est formé dans l’esprit des Frères de la vie commune à l’école de Zwolle aux Pays-Bas et achève sa formation à l’Université de Cologne.

Avec Jean Gerson (1363-1429) et Nicolas de Cues (1402-1464), et ce malgré un style beaucoup plus bavard et parfois confus, Denys le Chartreux compta au nombre des auteurs les plus lus, les plus copiés puis les plus édités, quand l’imprimerie en vint à supplanter le laborieux travail des moines copistes. D’ailleurs, le premier livre publié en Flandres, ne fut autre que le Miroir de l’âme pècheresse de Denys le Chartreux, imprimé en 1473 par l’ami d’Erasme de Rotterdam, Dirk Martens.

Au monastère de Roermond au Pays-bas, Denys écrit 150 œuvres dont des commentaires sur la Bible et 900 sermons. Après en avoir lu un, le pape Eugène IV, qui vient d’ordonner à Brunelleschi de parachever la coupole du dôme de Florence, exulta : « L’Eglise mère se réjouit d’avoir pareil fils ! ».

En tant que savant, théologien et conseiller, Denys était très influent. « Nombre de gentilshommes, de clercs et de bourgeois viennent le consulter dans sa cellule à Ruremonde où il ne cesse de résoudre doutes, difficultés et cas de conscience. (…) Il se trouve en relations fréquentes avec la maison de Bourgogne et sert de conseiller à Philippe le Bon », confirme l’historien néerlandais Huizinga dans son Déclin du Moyen-âge.

Selon Bakker, ayant rédigé une série d’œuvres d’orientation spirituelle, Denys, remplit le rôle de confesseur et de guide spirituel du souverain chrétien Philippe le Bon , duc de Bourgogne, et par la suite, de celui de sa veuve.

Denys le Chartreux, chaire de la Cathédrale de Laon.

Denys le Chartreux est un ami, admirateur et collaborateur du cardinal Nicolas de Cues.

Ensemble, ils suivent à Cologne les cours du théologien flamand Heymeric van de Velde (De Campo) qui les initie à la théologie mystique du moine platonicien syrien connu sous le nom du Pseudo-Denys l’Aréopagite et à l’œuvre de Raymond Lulle et d’Albert le Grand.

Lorsqu’en 1432, Nicolas De Cues décline la chaire de Théologie que lui offre l’Université de Louvain, c’est De Campo qui, à sa demande, accepte cette fonction.

Politiquement, de 1451 à 1452, c’est Denys le Chartreux que choisit Nicolas de Cues, alors légat apostolique, pour l’accompagner durant plusieurs mois lors de sa tournée en pays rhénan et mosellan pour y faire appliquer, à la demande du pape, le renouveau spirituel qu’il promeut.

Bakker note que Denys a une prédilection pour la musique. Il recopie et illumine de sa main des partitions et donne des instructions sur la meilleure interprétation possible des psaumes. Sa préférence va à des psaumes qui font l’éloge de Dieu. Et pour faire l’éloge du créateur, Denys trouve des images et des paroles qu’on verra rebondir dans l’imagination des peintres de l’époque.

Cependant, pour Denys, la beauté de Dieu signifie quelque chose de plus profond qu’une simple attractivité visuelle. « Pour toi (seigneur), ‘être’ équivaut à ‘être beau’ ». Rappelons que la vue, dans la philosophie chrétienne, est le sens primordial et celui qui résume tous les autres.

Dans les psaumes de Denys, deux notions prévalent. D’abord, celle de l’ordre et de la régularité. On les retrouve dans les corps célestes qui déterminent le rythme des jours et des années. Mais la Terre elle-même obéit à un ordre divin. Et là Denys cite le Livre de la Sagesse de Salomon (11,20) affirmant : « Tu as tout ordonné avec mesure, nombre et poids ».

Ensuite, il y a l’idée de multiplicité et de diversité. Sur les phénomènes climatiques, c’est-à-dire des phénomènes purement « physiques », Denys affirme par exemple,

Dans le ciel, seigneur, tu génères des effets multiples de pression et de souffle, tels que des nuages, des vents, des pluies (…) et différents phénomènes : des comètes, des couronnes lumineuses, des vortex, des étoiles tombantes (…), du givre et de la brume, de la grêle, de la neige, l’arc en ciel et le dragon volant.

Pour Denys, tout cela n’a pas été créé pour rien mais pour pénétrer l’homme de la réalité divine, sa grandeur infinie, son omnipuissance et son amour pour l’homme.

Faites en sorte seigneur, écrit-il, que dans les effets de votre laboriosité universelle, nous vous percevions et que par l’amour dont elle témoigne, nous nous enflammions et que nous nous éveillions à honorer votre grandeur.

Sur Dieu et le beau, Denys écrit un véritable traité d’esthétique théologique sous le titre De Venustate Mundi et pulchritudine Dei (De l’attractivité du monde et de la beauté de Dieu).

agneau

Retable de Gent (Belgique) ou l’Agneau mystique, peint par Jan Van Eyck.

cour

La cour de Philippe le Bon, duc de Bourgogne. Miniature de Rogier Van der Weyden.

En lisant ce qui suit, c’est tout de suite le retable de Gand, l’Agneau mystique, ce grand polyptyque peint par Jan Van Eyck qui nous vient à l’esprit.

Sachant que ce peintre était au service (peintre et ambassadeur) du même Philippe le Bon, duc de Bourgogne, dont Denys le Chartreux fut le confesseur et guide spirituel, on est en droit de croire que ce texte s’est imposé dans l’esprit du peintre dans l’élaboration de son œuvre.

Denys le Chartreux :

De même que toute créature participe à l’être de Dieu et à sa bonté, de même le Créateur lui communique aussi quelque chose de sa beauté divine, éternelle, incréée, par quoi elle est en partie rendue semblable à son Créateur et participe quelque peu à sa beauté. Autant une chose reçoit l’être, autant elle reçoit le bon et le beau. Il existe donc une beauté incréée qui est la beauté et le beau par essence : Dieu.

Autre est la beauté créée : le beau par participation. De même que toute créature est appelée être dans la mesure où elle participe à l’être divin et lui est assimilée par une certaine imitation, de même toute créature est dite belle dans la mesure où elle participe à la beauté divine et lui est rendue conforme. De même que Dieu a fait toutes choses bonnes parce qu’il est bon par nature, de même il a fait toutes choses belles parce qu’il est essentiellement beau.

(…) Le fils unique de Dieu, vrai Dieu lui-même, a pris notre nature et est devenu notre frère. Par lui, notre nature a reçu une dignité de majesté indicible. Dieu a de plus orné les âmes des bienheureux qui sont dans la patrie céleste, de sa lumière et de sa gloire, et les a élevés à la vision béatifique, immédiate, claire et bienheureuse de sa Divinité toute pure. En contemplant la beauté incréée et infinie de l’essence divine, elles sont transformées à son image d’une façon surnaturelle et ineffable. Elles sont remplies et débordent de cette participation, de cette communion de bonté, lumière et beauté divines, au point d’être entièrement ravies en lui, configurées à lui, absorbées en lui. Elles atteignent ainsi une beauté telle, que les splendeurs du monde entier ne sauraient être comparées à la beauté de la plus petite d’entre elles.

Retour au peintre

Ce dernier paragraphe évoque immédiatement la partie supérieure du polyptyque de Jan Van Eyck à Gent.

On a du mal à mesurer l’effet que ce tableau a pu susciter chez les croyants : ils y voyaient non seulement Adam et Eve, élevés au même niveau que Dieu, la Vierge et Saint-Jean Baptiste, mais y découvraient, alors que moins d’un pour cent de la population européenne ne savaient lire et écrire, l’image d’une ravissante jeune femme lisant la Bible. Son nom ? Marie, mère de Jésus !

La partie inférieure de la même œuvre met en scène un autre évènement majeur : la réunification, suite aux différents conciles œcuméniques, de tous les chrétiens, qu’ils soient d’Occident ou d’Orient et jusque là divisés par des querelles subalternes, autour de la quintessence de la foi chrétienne : le sacrifice du Fils de Dieu pour libérer l’homme du péché originel.

Sont regroupés en chœurs autour de l’évènement tout ce qui comptaient dans l’univers : les trois papes, les philosophes, les poètes (Virgile), les martyrs, les ermites, les prophètes, les justes juges, les chevaliers chrétiens, les saints et les vierges.

Le tout présenté dans un paysage transformé par un véritable « Printemps » chrétien. Van Eyck n’hésite pas à représenter, avec moult détails de toute la splendeur de leur microcosme, une bonne cinquantaine d’espèces végétales au moment où elles offrent leurs plus belles fleurs et feuilles.

Littéralement, cela fait apparaître la richesse de la création dans toute sa variété; allégoriquement, cela représente le créateur comme sève de la vie; moralement, c’est le sacrifice du fils de Dieu qui redonnera vie à l’église des chrétiens; et enfin, anagogiquement, cela nous rappelle que nous devons tendre à nous unir au créateur, source de toute vie, bien et sagesse.

Une fois de plus, ce n’est que chez Denys le Chartreux, dans le passage de conclusion de son {Venestate Mundi et pulchritudine Dei} que l’on trouve un éloge aussi passionné de la beauté du monde visible, y compris une référence au fameux {« vert foncé des prés »} si typique de Van Eyck :

{Démarrons par le plus bas, les éléments de la terre. Dans quelles longueur et largeur immensurables elle s’étend loin devant nous ; comment sa surface est ornée d’innombrables espèces et sortes d’individus de choses merveilleuses. Regardez les lis et les roses et autres fleurs de belles couleurs émettant leurs odeurs adorables, les herbes guérissantes qui poussent sur le vert foncé des prés et à l’ombre des forêts, la splendeur des arbres et des champs luxuriants, des hauteurs de montagnes, de la fraicheur des arbres, des étangs, des ruisseaux et des rivières s’étalant jusqu’à la mer au lointain ! A quel point Il doit être beau en lui-même, Celui qui a tout créé ! Regardez et admirez la multitude d’animaux, comment ils brillent dans la variété de leurs couleurs ! Aux poissons et oiseaux se réjouit l’œil et s’adresse notre éloge du Créateur. Dans quels beauté et lustre se drapent les grands animaux, le cheval, l’unicorne, le chameau, le cerf, le saumon et le brochet, le phénix, le paon et l’épervier. Qu’Il est élevé, celui qui a fait tout cela !}

Avec ce que nous venons de lire et de dire, le spectateur peut enfin savourer en pleine confiance et sans modération cette beauté, car il ne s’agit de rien d’autre que la prégustation de la sagesse divine !

Avec ce que nous venons de lire et de dire, le spectateur peut savourer en pleine confiance cette beauté, car il ne s’agit de rien d’autre que la prégustation de la sagesse divine !

Bibliographie :

  • Boudewijn Bakker, Landschap en Wereldbeeld. Van Van Eyck tot Rembrandt, Thoth, 2004 ;
  • Patrice Sicard, Hugues de Saint-Victor et son école, Brepols, 1991.
  • Denys le Chartreux, Vers la ressemblance, textes réunis et présentés par Christophe Bagonneau, Parole et Silence, 2003.

Merci de partager !

Joachim Patinir et l’invention du paysage en peinture

Joachim Patinir, Paysage avec Saint Jérôme, National Gallery, Londres.

 

En novembre 2008, un colloque fut organisé au Centre d’études supérieures sur la Renaissance de Tours sur le thème de « La contemplation dans la peinture flamande (XIVe-XVIe siècle) ». Voici la transcription de la contribution de Karel Vereycken, représentant de l’Institut Schiller, sur Joachim Patinir, un peintre belge peu connu mais essentiel pour l’histoire de l’art.


Joachim Patinir (1485-1524), dessin fait par Albrecht Dürer, venu assister au mariage de Patinir à Anvers en 1520.

On estime généralement que dans la peinture flamande, le concept « moderne » de paysage n’est apparu qu’avec l’œuvre de Joachim Patinir (1485-1524), un peintre originaire de Dinant travaillant à Anvers au début du XVIe siècle.

Pour l’historien d’art viennois Ludwig von Baldass (1887-1963), qui écrit au début du XXe siècle, l’œuvre de Patinir, présentée comme nettement en avance sur son temps, serait annonciatrice du paysage comme überschauweltlandschaft, traduisible comme « paysage panoramique du monde », véritable représentation cosmique et totalisante de l’univers visible.

Ce qui caractérise l’œuvre de Patinir, affirment les partisans de cette analyse, c’est l’ampleur considérable des paysages qu’elle offre à la contemplation du spectateur.

Cette ampleur présente un double caractère : l’espace figuré est immense (du fait d’un point de vue panoramique situé très haut, presque « céleste »), en même temps qu’il englobe, sans souci de vraisemblance géographique, le plus grand nombre possible de phénomènes différents et de spécimens représentatifs, typiques de ce que la terre peut offrir comme curiosités, parfois même des motifs imaginaires, oniriques, irréels, fantastiques : champs, bois, montagnes anthropomorphes, villages et cités, déserts et forêts, arc-en-ciel et tempête, marécages et fleuves, rivières et volcans.

Le Rocher Bayart sur la Meuse, près de Dinant, Belgique.

On peut par exemple penser y retrouver « la roche Bayart », qui borde la Meuse non loin de la ville de Dinant dont Patinir était originaire.

A part cette perspective panoramique, Patinir fait appel à la perspective aérienne — théorisée à l’époque par Léonard de Vinci — grâce à un découpage de l’espace en trois plans couleur : brun-ocre pour le premier, vert pour le plan moyen, bleu pour le lointain.

Cependant, le peintre conserve la visibilité de la totalité des détails avec une méticulosité, une minutie et une préciosité digne des maîtres flamands du XVe, qui, en tendant vers un infini quantitatif (consistant à tout montrer), cherchaient à se rapprocher d’un infini qualitatif (permettant de tout voir).

Pour leur part, les auteurs de la thèse du weltlandschaft, après avoir comblé Patinir d’éloges, n’hésitent pas à fortement relativiser sa contribution en disant :

« Pour que le paysage en peinture devienne autre chose qu’un entassement virtuose mais compulsif de motifs, et plus précisément, la saisie quasi-documentaire d’un infime fragment de la réalité contingente, il faudra attendre le XVIIe siècle et la pleine maturité de la peinture hollandaise… »

Et c’est là que l’on identifie très bien le piège de cette démarche qui consiste à faire croire que l’avènement du paysage, en tant que genre autonome, sa soi-disant « laïcisation », n’est que le résultat de l’émancipation d’une matrice mentale médiévale et religieuse, considérée comme forcément rétrograde, pour laquelle le paysage se réduisait à une pure émanation ou incarnation de la puissance divine.

Patinir, le premier, aurait donc fait preuve d’une conception purement esthétique « moderne », et ces paysages « réalistes », marqueraient le passage d’un paradigme culturel religieux — donc obscurantiste — vers un paradigme moderne, c’est-à-dire dépourvu de sens… ce qu’on lui reprochera par la suite.

C’est bien ce regard-là qu’ont pu porter les esprits romantiques et fantastiques du XVIIe et XVIIIe siècle sur les artistes du XVe et XVIe siècle. Von Baldass fut certainement influencé par les écrits d’un Goethe qui, sans doute dans un moment d’enthousiasme pour le paganisme grec, analysant la place de plus en plus réduite accordée aux personnages religieux dans les tableaux flamands du XVIe, en déduit que ce n’était plus le sujet religieux qui faisait fonction de sujet, mais le paysage.

Autant que Rubens aurait prétexté peindre Adam et Eve chassés du Paradis pour pouvoir peindre des nus, Patinir n’aurait fait que saisir le prétexte d’un passage biblique pour pouvoir se livrer à sa véritable passion, le paysage.

Un petit détour par Bosch

Un regard nouveau sur l’œuvre de Patinir démontre sans conteste l’erreur de cette analyse.

Pour aboutir à une lecture plus juste, je vous propose ici un petit détour par Jérôme Bosch, dont l’esprit était très vivant parmi le cercle des amis d’Erasme à Anvers (Gérard David, Quentin Massys, Jan Wellens Cock, Albrecht Dürer, etc.), dont Patinir faisait partie.

Bosch, contrairement aux clichés toujours en vogue de nos jours, est avant tout un esprit pieux et moralisateur. S’il montre le vice, ce n’est pas tant pour en faire l’éloge mais pour nous faire prendre conscience à quel point ce vice nous attire. Fidèle aux traditions augustiniennes de la Devotio Moderna, promues par les Frères de la Vie commune (un mouvement de renouveau spirituel dont il était proche), Bosch estime que l’attachement de l’homme aux choses terrestres le conduit au péché. Voilà le sujet central de toute son oeuvre, dont on ne peut pénétrer l’esprit qu’à la lecture de L’imitation du Christ, écrit, selon toute probabilité, par l’âme fondatrice de la Devotio Moderna, Geert Groote (1340-1384), ou son disciple, Thomas à Kempis (1379-1471) à qui cette œuvre est généralement attribuée.

Dans cet écrit, le plus lu de l’histoire de l’homme après la Bible, on peut lire :

« Vanités des vanités, tout n’est que vanité, hors aimer Dieu et le servir seul. La souveraine sagesse est de tendre au royaume du ciel par le mépris du monde. Vanité donc, d’amasser des richesses périssables et d’espérer en elles. Vanités, d’aspirer aux honneurs et de s’élever à ce qu’il y a de plus haut. Vanité, de suivre les désirs de la chair et de rechercher ce dont il faudra bientôt être rigoureusement puni. Vanité, de souhaiter une longue vie et de ne pas se soucier de bien vivre. Vanité, de ne penser qu’à la vie présente et de ne pas prévoir ce qui la suivra. Vanité, de s’attacher à ce qui passe si vite et de ne pas se hâter vers la joie qui ne finit point. Rappelez-vous souvent cette parole du sage : l’œil n’est pas rassasié de ce qu’il voit, ni l’oreille remplie de ce qu’elle entend. Appliquez-vous donc à détacher votre cœur de l’amour des choses visibles, pour le porter tout entier vers les invisibles, car ceux qui suivent l’attrait de leurs sens souillent leur âme et perdent la grâce de Dieu. »

Bosch traite ce sujet avec beaucoup de compassion et un humour hors pair dans son tableau le Char de foin (Musée du Prado, Madrid)

Jérôme Bosch, le retable du Char de foin, panneau central, référence à la vanité des richesses terrestres. Musée du Prado, Madrid.

L’allégorie de la paille existe déjà dans l’Ancien Testament. On lit dans Isaïe, 40,6 :

« Toute chair est de l’herbe, et tout son éclat comme la fleur des champs ; l’herbe sèche, la fleur se flétrit quand le souffle de Yahvé passe dessus. Oui, le peuple est de l’herbe. L’herbe sèche, la fleur se flétrit, mais la parole de notre Dieu se réalise à jamais ».

Elle sera reprise dans le Nouveau Testament par l’apôtre Pierre (1, 24) : « Car Toute chair est comme l’herbe, Et toute sa gloire comme la fleur de l’herbe. L’herbe sèche, et la fleur tombe ». C’est d’ailleurs ce passage que Brahms utilise dans le deuxième mouvement de son Requiem allemand.

Sur le triptyque de Bosch, on voit donc un char de foin, allégorie de la vanité des richesses terrestres, tiré par d’étranges créatures qui s’avancent vers l’enfer. Le duc de Bourgogne, l’empereur d’Allemagne, et même le pape en personne (c’est l’époque de Jules II…) suivent de près ce char, tandis qu’une bonne douzaine de personnages se battent à mort pour attraper un brin de paille. C’est un peu comme l’immense bulle des titres spéculatifs qui conduit notre époque vers une grande dépression…

On s’imagine très bien les banquiers qui ont saboté le sommet du G20 pour faire perdurer leur système si profitable à très court terme. Mais cette corruption ne touche pas que les grands de ce monde. A l’avant-plan du tableau, un abbé se fait remplir des sacs entiers de foin, un faux dentiste et aussi des tziganes trompent les gens pour un peu de paille.

Le colporteur et l’homo viator

Le triptyque fermé résume le même topos sous forme d’un colporteur (et non l’enfant prodigue). Ce colporteur, éternel homo viator, est une allégorie de l’Homme qui se bat pour rester sur le bon chemin et tient à ne pas quitter sa voie.

Dans une autre version du même sujet peint par Bosch (Musée Boijmans Beuningen, Rotterdam), le colporteur avance op een slof en een schoen (sur une pantoufle et une chaussure), c’est-à-dire qu’il choisit la précarité, quittant le monde visible du péché (nous voyons un bordel et des ivrognes) et abandonnant ses possessions matérielles.

Jérôme Bosch. Ici le colporteur n’est qu’une métaphore du chemin choisi par l’âme qui se détache sans cesse des tentations terrestres. Avec son bâton (la foi), le croyant repousse le pêché (le chien) qui vient lui mordre les mollets.

Avec son bâton (symbole de la foi), il réussit à repousser les chiens infernaux (symbole des tentations), qui tentent de le retenir. Une fois de plus, il ne s’agit point de manifestations de l’imagination exubérante de Bosch, mais d’un langage métaphorique partagé à l’époque. On trouve d’ailleurs cette représentation en marge du fameux Luttrell Psalter, un psautier anglais du XIVe siècle.

Luttrell Psaltar, colporteur avec bâton et chien infernal, British Library, Londres.

Ce thème de l’homo viator, l’homme qui se détache des biens terrestres, est par ailleurs récurrent dans l’art et la littérature de cette époque, en particulier depuis la traduction en néerlandais du Pèlerinage de la vie et de l’âme humaine, écrit en 1358 par le moine cistercien normand Guillaume de Degulleville (1295-après 1358). Une miniature de cette œuvre nous montre une âme sur son chemin, habillée en colporteur.

Miniature extraite du Pèlerinage de la vie et l’âme humaine de Guillaume Degulleville.

Néanmoins, si au XIVe siècle cette exigence spirituelle a pu dicter un rigorisme quelquefois excessif, le rire libérateur de l’humanisme naissant (Brant, Erasme, Rabelais, etc.) apportera des couleurs plus gaies et plus libres à la culture flamande du Brabant (Bosch, Matsys, Bruegel), bien qu’étouffées ensuite par les dictats du Concile de Trente. L’attachement de l’homme aux biens terrestres devient alors sujet à rire. Publié à Bâle en 1494, La Nef des Fous de Sébastien Brant, véritable inventaire de toutes les folies qui peuvent conduire l’homme vers sa perte, marquera toute une génération qui retrouve créativité et optimisme grâce au rire libérateur d’un Erasme et de son disciple, l’humaniste chrétien François Rabelais.

En tout cas, pour Bosch, Patinir et la Devotio Moderna, la contemplation est à l’opposé même du pessimisme et de la passivité scolastique. Pour eux, le rire est l’antidote idéal pour éradiquer le désespoir, l’acedia (la lassitude) et la mélancolie. La contemplation y prend donc une nouvelle dimension. Chaque fidèle est incité à vivre son engagement chrétien, par l’expérience personnelle et l’imitation individuelle du Christ. Il doit cesser de rejeter sa propre responsabilité sur les grandes figures de la Bible et de l’Histoire sainte. L’homme ne peut plus s’en remettre à l’intercession de la Vierge, des apôtres et des saints. Il doit, tout en suivant les exemples, prêter un contenu personnel à l’idéal de la vie chrétienne. Porté à l’action, chaque individu, à titre individuel et pleinement conscient de sa nature de pêcheur, est constamment amené à faire le choix du bien au détriment du mal. Voilà quelques éléments sur l’arrière-plan culturel nous permettant d’approcher différemment les paysages de Patinir.

Charon traversant le Styx

Le tableau de Patinir intitulé Charon traversant le Styx (Musée du Prado, Madrid) qui combine traditions antique et chrétienne, nous servira ici de « pierre de Rosette ». Inspiré par le sixième livre de l’Enéide, où l’écrivain romain Virgile décrit la catabase, ou la descente aux enfers, ou encore l’Inferno de Dante (3, ligne 78) repris de Virgile, Patinir place une barque au centre de l’œuvre.

Joachim Patinir, Charon traversant le Styx, Musée du Prado, Madrid.

Le grand personnage debout dans cette barque est Charon, le nocher des Enfers, généralement présenté sous les traits d’un vieillard morose et sinistre. Sa tâche consiste à faire traverser le fleuve Styx, aux âmes des défunts qui ont reçu une sépulture. En paiement, Charon prend une pièce de monnaie placée dans la bouche des cadavres. Le passager de la barque est donc une âme humaine. Bien que la scène ait lieu après la mort physique de la personne, l’âme, et ça peut surprendre, est taraudée par le choix entre le Paradis et l’Enfer. Car si depuis le Concile de Trente, on estime qu’une mauvaise vie envoie irrémédiablement l’homme en enfer dès l’instant de sa mort, la foie chrétienne continue, y compris aujourd’hui, à distinguer le jugement dernier de ce qu’on appelle le « jugement particulier ». Selon cette conception, parfois contestée au sein des confessions, au moment de la mort, bien que notre sort final soit fixé (Hébreux 9,27), toutes les conséquences de ce Jugement particulier ne seront pas tirées avant le Jugement général, qui aura lieu lors du retour du Christ, à la fin des temps. Ainsi, le « Jugement particulier » qui est supposé suivre immédiatement notre mort, concerne notre dernier acte de liberté, préparé par tout ce que fut notre vie. Nous aider à contempler cet instant ultime semble donc l’objectif premier du tableau de Patinir, en y mêlant d’autres métaphores.

Cependant, un regard attentif sur la partie inférieure du tableau, nous fait découvrir une contradiction, absente du poème de Virgile. Si l’enfer est à droite (on y voit Cerbère, le chien à trois têtes qui garde la porte de l’enfer), la porte d’entrée en semble facile d’accès et des arbres splendides y parsèment de belles pelouses. A gauche, se trouve le Paradis. Un ange tente d’ailleurs d’attirer l’attention de l’âme dans la barque, mais celle-ci semble beaucoup plus attirée par un enfer d’apparence si accueillante. De plus, le chemin peu éclairé qui mène au paradis semble périlleux par la présence de rochers, de marais et autres obstacles dangereux. Une fois de plus, ce sont nos sens qui risquent de nous conduire à faire un choix littéralement infernal.

Le sujet du tableau est donc clairement celui du bivium, le choix binaire qui se pose à la croisée des chemins et offre au spectateur pèlerin le choix entre la voie du vice et celle du salut.

Sébastien Brant, La Nef des fous, illustration de Hercule à la croisée des chemins.

Ce thème est très répandu à l’époque. On le retrouve dans la Nef des Fous de Sébastien Brant, sous la forme d’Hercule à la croisée des chemins. Dans cette illustration, à gauche, en haut d’une colline, une femme nue représente le vice et l’oisiveté. Derrière elle, la mort nous sourit.

A droite, plantée au sommet d’une colline plus élevée, au bout d’un chemin rocailleux, attend la vertu symbolisée par le travail. Rappelons également que l’Evangile (Matthieu 7:13-14) évoque clairement le choix auquel nous serons confrontés : « Entrez par la porte étroite. Car large est la porte, spacieux est le chemin qui mènent à la perdition, et il y en a beaucoup qui entrent par là. Mais étroite est la porte, resserré le chemin qui mène à la vie, et il y en a peu qui les trouvent ».

Le paysage comme objet de contemplation

L’historien d’art Reindert Leonard Falkenburg, dans sa thèse doctorale de 1985, fut le premier à constater que Patinir s’amuse à transposer ce langage métaphorique à l’ensemble de son paysage. Bien que l’image de rochers infranchissables, comme métaphore de la vertu à laquelle on aboutit en choisissant le chemin difficile, ne soit pas une nouveauté, Patinir exploite cette idée avec une virtuosité sans précédent. On découvre ainsi que le thème de l’homme qui se détourne courageusement de la tentation d’un monde qui piège notre sensorium, est le thème théo-philosophique sous-jacent de presque tous les paysages de Patinir. Ainsi, son œuvre trouve sa raison d’être en tant qu’objet de contemplation, où l’homme se mesure à l’infini.

Retournons à notre Paysage avec Saint Jérôme de Patinir (National Gallery, Londres). On y découvre la « porte étroite » conduisant à un chemin difficile qui nous porte vers un premier plateau. Ce n’est pas la montagne la plus élevée. La plus haute, telle une tour de Babylone, est symbole d’orgueil. Regardons ensuite Le repos sur le chemin d’Egypte (Musée du Prado, Madrid). Au bord du chemin, Marie est assise et devant elle, par terre, sont disposés le bâton du colporteur et son panier typique.

Joachim Patinir, Le repos de la Sainte famille, Musée du Prado, Madrid.

Pour conclure, on pourrait dire que, poussé par sa ferveur spirituelle et humaniste, en peignant des rochers de plus en plus infranchissables — traduisant l’immense vertu de ceux qui décident de les escalader — Patinir élabore non pas des paysages « réalistes », mais des « paysages spirituels », dictés par l’immense besoin de raconter le cheminement spirituel de l’âme.

Loin d’être de simples objets esthétiques, ses paysages spirituels servent la contemplation. Comme image en miroir, à moitié ironique, ils permettent, à ceux qui le désirent, de préparer les choix auxquels leur âme sera confrontée pendant, et après le pèlerinage de la vie.


Bibliographie sommaire :

  • R.L. Falkenburg, Joachim Patinir, Het landschap als beeld van de levenspelgrimage, Nijmegen, 1985.
  • Maurice Pons et André Barret, Patinir ou l’harmonie du monde, Robert Laffont, 1980.
  • Eric de Bruyn, De vergeten beeldentaal van Jheronimus Bosch, Adr. Heinen, s’Hertogenbosch, 2001.
  • Dirk Bax, Hieronymus Bosch, his picture-writing deciphered, A.A. Balkema, Capetown, 1979.
  • Georgette Epinay-Burgard, Gérard Groote, fondateur de la Dévotion Moderne, Brepols, 1998.
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