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Crucifixion Diptych (van der Weyden)

Crucifixion Diptych — also known as Philadelphia Diptych, Calvary Diptych, Christ on the Cross with the Virgin and St. John, or The Crucifixion with the Virgin and Saint John the Evangelist Mourning — is a diptych by the Early Netherlandish artist Rogier van der Weyden, completed c. 1460,[1] today in the Philadelphia Museum of Art. The panels are noted for their technical skill, visceral impact and for possessing a physicality and directness unusual for Netherlandish art of the time. The Philadelphia Museum of Art describes work as the "greatest Old Master painting in the Museum."[2]

Rogier van der Weyden, Crucifixion Diptych (c. 1460). Oil on oak panels. Left panel: 180.3 × 93.8 cm (71.0 × 36.9 in); right panel: 180.3 × 92.6 cm (71.0 × 36.5 in). Philadelphia Museum of Art

The painting's provenance prior to the mid-19th century is unknown. Its extreme starkness has led art historians to theorize that it was created as a devotional work, possibly for a Carthusian monastery. It is not known if the panels comprised a self-contained diptych, two-thirds of a triptych, or originally were a single panel.[3] Some art historians have mentioned that the work seems unbalanced overall and lacking symmetry (which might indicate a missing panel or panels). Recent scholarship proposes that the panels functioned as the outer shutters of a carved altarpiece.[4]

The panels

Origin

The background to the panels is unknown. Scholars have theorized that they could be the left and center panels of a triptych, that they formed either the wings or shutters of an altarpiece, or that they were intended to decorate an organ case.[5] The train of the Virgin's robe continues onto the right panel, which evidences that the panels were intended to lay side-by-side rather than separated (as the wings of an altarpiece would have been). Art historian E. P. Richardson proposed that they were the center panel of the lost Cambrai altarpiece (executed between 1455 and 1459), a single painting now split into two parts.[6]

 
Detail of right panel.

Art historian Penny Howell Jolly was the first to propose that the diptych was painted for an unnamed Carthusian monastery.[7] Carthusians lived a severely ascetic existence: absolute silence, isolation in one's cell except for daily Mass and Vespers, a communal meal only on Sundays and festival days, bread and water on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, clothes and bedding of the coarsest materials.[8] Van der Weyden's son Cornelis entered the Carthusian Monastery of Herrines about 1449, and was invested in the order in 1450.[9] The artist donated money and paintings to the order during his lifetime, and made a bequest to it in his will.[10] His only daughter Margaretha became a Dominican nun.[11] Art historian Dirk de Vos describes the diptych as a "monastically inspired devotional painting" whose composition was "largely determined by the scetic worship of the Carthusians and Dominicans."[12]

 
Detail of the Mary and St. John panel.

In a paper presented at the 2006 convention of the Historians of Netherlandish Art, Philadelphia Museum of Art conservator Mark S. Tucker observed that the wooden panels were unusually thin. Across the back of each, he found a horizontal line of dowel holes near the base, which strongly indicated a now-missing structural member.[4] He compared this with similar joinery on the shutters of altarpieces, and theorized that the diptych represented two panels of a four-panel work – either the two-panelled left shutter of an altarpiece, or its center two panels.[4] Based on pictorial style, Tucker argued that the large size of the human figures relative to the size of the panels was more in keeping with figures on the shutters of carved altarpieces than painted ones.[4] He also noted that the shutters of carved altarpieces tend to de-emphasize the deep perspective commonly seen in painted altarpieces, which was consistent with the shallow pictorial space of the diptych.[4]

Description

The diptych's figures are almost two-thirds life size. The right panel depicts a deliberately unnaturalistic Crucifixion scene. Christ's blood is visible on his hands, feet and brow, and trickles down from the wound in his side. The impression of blood is amplified by the brilliant red cloth of honor draped behind him. The body hangs heavily from the arms, forming a Y-shaped figure against the T-shape of the cross and the rectangle of the cloth. The skull and bone at the foot of the Cross refer to Adam, the first man created by God in Judaism, Christianity and Islam.[9] Christ's loincloth flutters in the wind, indicating the moment of death.[13]

 
Detail showing the skull and bone at the base of the cross.

The left panel shows a swooning Virgin Mary supported by Saint John the Evangelist. Both are dressed in pale folded robes, and again presented before a draped red cloth of honor (which, given the creases, appears to have been recently unfolded). The high stone wall gives the effect of pushing the figures into the foreground. The dark sky conforms with scripture: (Matthew 27:45: "Now from the sixth hour [noon] there was darkness over all the land unto the ninth hour [3:00 pm]." King James Bible, Cambridge edition.) The dark sky, stark wall, cool light and bare ground contribute to the painting's austerity.

In his first masterpiece, The Descent from the Cross (c. 1435–40), van der Weyden likened the Virgin Mary's suffering during the Crucifixion to Christ's by having her collapse in a pose that mirrored that of his body being removed from the Cross.[14] In the Philadelphia painting, the faces of the Virgin Mary and Christ mirror each other, as do their positions at the center of the red cloths.

The diptych was executed late in the artist's life, and is unique among paintings of the early Northern Renaissance in its utilization of a flat unnaturalistic background to stage figures which are yet, typically highly detailed.[15] Nonetheless, the contrast of vivid primary reds and whites serves to achieve an emotional effect typical of van der Weyden's best work.

Escorial Crucifixion

 
Crucifixion with the Virgin and St. John (c. 1460), Rogier van der Weyden, Escorial Palace, Madrid.

The diptych is most closely related to van der Weyden's Crucifixion with the Virgin and St. John (c. 1450–55) at the Escorial Palace in Madrid.[5] The Escorial Crucifixion also presents Christ on the Cross before a draped red cloth, and there are similarities in the other figures.[16] Van der Weyden painted this for and donated it to the Carthusian monastery in Scheut, near Brussels.[17] Philip II of Spain bought it from the monastery in 1555, and installed it in a chapel in Segovia, before moving it to the Escorial in 1574.[5] The diptych's figures are almost two-thirds life size; those in the towering Escorial painting are fully life size.

In her master's thesis exploring the influence of Carthusian theology on van der Weyden's Escorial Crucifixion and Crucifixion Diptych, Tamytha Cameron Smith argues that the two works "are visually unique" in the artist's oeuvre, "because of their extreme starkness, simplicity and tendency toward abstraction."[18] The traditional deep blue of the Virgin's robe and dark red of St. John's robe have been bleached out, leaving the garments near white (the color of Carthusian robes).[19] Smith notes the "overwhelming stillness" of the diptych, and speculates that it may have been van der Weyden's last work.[20]

In Vita Christi (1374) the Carthusian theologian Ludolph of Saxony introduced the concept of immersing and projecting oneself into a Biblical scene from the life of Christ.[21] Ludolph described St. John as steadfastly loyal to Christ, but also "adorned with the brilliancy and beauty conferred by chastity."[22] If the Philadelphia diptych was utilized as a Ludolphian devotional painting (as the Escorial Crucifixion certainly was), a monk could have empathized with the suffering of Christ and the Virgin, but also been able to project himself into the scene as the ever-loyal (and ever-chaste) St. John. With this intended function, van der Weyden's decision to strip away the extraneous detail present in his other Crucifixions can be seen as having had both an artistic and a practical purpose.

Conservation

 
Detail of right panel, with the gold sky that was added in 1941.

The painting was conserved by freelance restorer David Rosen in 1941, under the supervision of Johnson Collection curator Henri Gabriel Marceau. Near the upper edge of a panel Rosen found gold paint, one of the factors that led him to conclude that the blue-black sky was an 18th-century addition.[23] Rosen scraped away the dark paint and added a gilded sky, which was how the diptych was exhibited for half a century.[5]

Examination of the painting in 1990 by Philadelphia Museum of Art conservator Mark S. Tucker showed little justification for this change. The traces of gold were minimal, and could have been residue from a gold-leafed frame.[24] Chemical analysis established that the surviving vestiges of blue pigment in the sky contained azurite of the same color and composition as blue pigment in the Virgin's robe, which was indisputably original.[24] Tucker undertook a thorough cleaning and (reversible) restoration, 1992–93, painting over the gold, since Rosen's 1941 restoration had removed almost all of the sky's original paint.[24]

The 1992–93 restoration has led to new insight about the artist. Van der Weyden's broad massing of color in the blue-black sky was something new in Northern Renaissance art, although common in Italian frescoes. The diptych's innovative composition and almost abstract use of color may represent his synthesis of the Italian art that he saw on his 1450 pilgrimage to Rome.[25]

Provenance

The provenance of the painting, as far as it is known, is as follows:

  • 1856, Madrid. Catalogue of the collection of José de Madrazo, nos. 659 & 660.[26]
  • June 1867, Paris. Auction of the collection of M. le Mis de Salamanca, lots 165 & 166.[5]
  • About 1905, Paris. Art dealer F. Kleinberger sells the "Christ on the Cross" panel to Peter A. B. Widener, and the "Virgin and St. John" panel to John G. Johnson.[5]
  • 1906, Philadelphia, United States. Johnson purchases Widener's panel and reunites the halves.[5] Exhibited in Johnson's house museum at 510 South Broad Street, Philadelphia.
  • April 1917, Philadelphia. Johnson dies. The diptych becomes part of his bequest to the City of Philadelphia.
  • June 1933, Philadelphia. The Johnson Collection is moved to the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

Gallery

Four other Crucifixion paintings have been attributed to van der Weyden:[27]

References

  1. ^ The Philadelphia Museum of Art dates the painting c. 1460; de Vos dates it slightly later (c. 1464–65). De Vos, 334-35.
  2. ^ Crawford Luber, Katherine. Philadelphia Museum of Art: Handbook of the Collections, 1995. 167
  3. ^ Wilhelm R. Valentiner, author of the Dutch and Flemish painting volume of the 1914 Johnson Collection catalogue, proposes that the panels were the shutters of a triptych. Johnson Catalogue 1914, 14.
  4. ^ a b c d e Tucker, New Findings.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Johnson Catalogue 1972, 94–95.
  6. ^ Richardson, E. P. "Rogier van der Weyden's Cambrai Altar." Art Quarterly Volume 2, 1939. 57–66. Old Cambrai Cathedral was defaced during the French Revolution and demolished in the 1790s.
  7. ^ Jolly, 113-26.
  8. ^ Lawrence, C. H. Medieval Monasticism: Forms of Religious Life in Western Europe in the Middle Ages. New York and London, 1989. 133-37
  9. ^ a b Smith, 20.
  10. ^ Smith, 20–21.
  11. ^ Smith, 17.
  12. ^ De Vos, 120
  13. ^ Hagen, Rose-Marie and Rainer. What Great Paintings Say, Volume 2. Los Angeles, CA: Taschen America, 2003. 167
  14. ^ Snyder, James, Northern Renaissance Art; Painting, Sculpture, The Graphic Arts from 1350 to 1575. Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2005, 118.
  15. ^ Smith, 18.
  16. ^ There is enough of a resemblance between the Marys and the St. Johns to argue that van der Weyden used the same models for both.
  17. ^ De Vos, 291-92
  18. ^ Smith, 13
  19. ^ Smith, 36.
  20. ^ Smith, 13; 16
  21. ^ McGrath, Alister. Christian Spirituality: An Introduction, 1999. 84–87 ISBN 978-0-631-21281-2
  22. ^ Coleridge, Henry James. Hours of the Passion Taken from the Life of Christ by Ludolph the Saxon. London, 1886. 312; quoted in Smith, 33
  23. ^ Rosen, D. "Preservation vs. Restoration," Magazine of Art, 34/9 1941. 458-71. Van der Weyden's The Descent from the Cross (c. 1435–40), Beaune Altarpiece (c. 1445–50), and Medici Madonna (c. 1460–64) all feature gilded backgrounds, harkening back to medievalism.
  24. ^ a b c Tucker, Burlington Magazine.
  25. ^ Jolly, 125-26.
  26. ^ De Vos, 335
  27. ^ Attribution of work from this period is extremely difficult as Northern Renaissance art fell out of fashion in the early 1510s and was not rediscovered until the mid-19th century. Often definitive attributions were not established until the mid-20th century, and many works from the period are still disputed.

Sources

  • de Vos, Dirk. Rogier van der Weyden: The Complete Works. Harry N Abrams, 2000. ISBN 0-8109-6390-6
  • Jolly, P. H. "Rogier van der Weyden's Escorial and Philadelphia Crucifixions and their Relation to Fra Angelico at San Marco." Oud Holland, 95, 1981.
  • Marrow, James H. "Symbol and Meaning in Northern European Art of the Late Middle Ages and the Early Renaissance". Simiolus: Netherlands Quarterly for the History of Art, Volume 16, No. 2/3, 1986. 150-169
  • Philadelphia Museum of Art. John G. Johnson Collection: Catalogue of Flemish and Dutch Paintings. Philadelphia: George H. Buchanan Co., 1972. (Johnson Catalogue 1972).
  • Smith, Tamytha Cameron. Personal Passions and Carthusian Influences Evident in Rogier van der Weyden's Crucified Christ between the Virgin and Saint John and Diptych of the Crucifixion. University of North Texas, May 2006.
  • Tucker, Mark. "Rogier van der Weyden's Philadelphia 'Crucifixion'." The Burlington Magazine, 139/1135, October 1997. 676-83.
  • Tucker, Mark. New Findings on the Function of Rogier van der Weyden's Philadelphia Crucifixion. 2012-02-26 at the Wayback Machine Paper presented at 2006 world convention of Historians of Netherlandish Art, Baltimore/Washington, D.C.
  • Valentiner, W. R. Catalogue of a Collection of Paintings and Some Art Objects, Volume II. 1914. (Johnson Catalogue 1914).

External links

  • Christopher D. M. Atkins and Mark S. Tucker, The Crucifixion, with the Virgin and Saint John the Evangelist Mourning[permanent dead link] in The John G. Johnson Collection: A History and Selected Works[permanent dead link], a Philadelphia Museum of Art free digital scholarly catalogue.
  • The Crucifixion, with the Virgin and Saint John the Evangelist Mourning from Philadelphia Museum of Art.

crucifixion, diptych, weyden, crucifixion, diptych, also, known, philadelphia, diptych, calvary, diptych, christ, cross, with, virgin, john, crucifixion, with, virgin, saint, john, evangelist, mourning, diptych, early, netherlandish, artist, rogier, weyden, co. Crucifixion Diptych also known as Philadelphia Diptych Calvary Diptych Christ on the Cross with the Virgin and St John or The Crucifixion with the Virgin and Saint John the Evangelist Mourning is a diptych by the Early Netherlandish artist Rogier van der Weyden completed c 1460 1 today in the Philadelphia Museum of Art The panels are noted for their technical skill visceral impact and for possessing a physicality and directness unusual for Netherlandish art of the time The Philadelphia Museum of Art describes work as the greatest Old Master painting in the Museum 2 Rogier van der Weyden Crucifixion Diptych c 1460 Oil on oak panels Left panel 180 3 93 8 cm 71 0 36 9 in right panel 180 3 92 6 cm 71 0 36 5 in Philadelphia Museum of Art The painting s provenance prior to the mid 19th century is unknown Its extreme starkness has led art historians to theorize that it was created as a devotional work possibly for a Carthusian monastery It is not known if the panels comprised a self contained diptych two thirds of a triptych or originally were a single panel 3 Some art historians have mentioned that the work seems unbalanced overall and lacking symmetry which might indicate a missing panel or panels Recent scholarship proposes that the panels functioned as the outer shutters of a carved altarpiece 4 Contents 1 The panels 1 1 Origin 1 2 Description 2 Escorial Crucifixion 3 Conservation 4 Provenance 5 Gallery 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksThe panels EditOrigin Edit The background to the panels is unknown Scholars have theorized that they could be the left and center panels of a triptych that they formed either the wings or shutters of an altarpiece or that they were intended to decorate an organ case 5 The train of the Virgin s robe continues onto the right panel which evidences that the panels were intended to lay side by side rather than separated as the wings of an altarpiece would have been Art historian E P Richardson proposed that they were the center panel of the lost Cambrai altarpiece executed between 1455 and 1459 a single painting now split into two parts 6 Detail of right panel Art historian Penny Howell Jolly was the first to propose that the diptych was painted for an unnamed Carthusian monastery 7 Carthusians lived a severely ascetic existence absolute silence isolation in one s cell except for daily Mass and Vespers a communal meal only on Sundays and festival days bread and water on Mondays Wednesdays and Fridays clothes and bedding of the coarsest materials 8 Van der Weyden s son Cornelis entered the Carthusian Monastery of Herrines about 1449 and was invested in the order in 1450 9 The artist donated money and paintings to the order during his lifetime and made a bequest to it in his will 10 His only daughter Margaretha became a Dominican nun 11 Art historian Dirk de Vos describes the diptych as a monastically inspired devotional painting whose composition was largely determined by the scetic worship of the Carthusians and Dominicans 12 Detail of the Mary and St John panel In a paper presented at the 2006 convention of the Historians of Netherlandish Art Philadelphia Museum of Art conservator Mark S Tucker observed that the wooden panels were unusually thin Across the back of each he found a horizontal line of dowel holes near the base which strongly indicated a now missing structural member 4 He compared this with similar joinery on the shutters of altarpieces and theorized that the diptych represented two panels of a four panel work either the two panelled left shutter of an altarpiece or its center two panels 4 Based on pictorial style Tucker argued that the large size of the human figures relative to the size of the panels was more in keeping with figures on the shutters of carved altarpieces than painted ones 4 He also noted that the shutters of carved altarpieces tend to de emphasize the deep perspective commonly seen in painted altarpieces which was consistent with the shallow pictorial space of the diptych 4 Description Edit The diptych s figures are almost two thirds life size The right panel depicts a deliberately unnaturalistic Crucifixion scene Christ s blood is visible on his hands feet and brow and trickles down from the wound in his side The impression of blood is amplified by the brilliant red cloth of honor draped behind him The body hangs heavily from the arms forming a Y shaped figure against the T shape of the cross and the rectangle of the cloth The skull and bone at the foot of the Cross refer to Adam the first man created by God in Judaism Christianity and Islam 9 Christ s loincloth flutters in the wind indicating the moment of death 13 Detail showing the skull and bone at the base of the cross The left panel shows a swooning Virgin Mary supported by Saint John the Evangelist Both are dressed in pale folded robes and again presented before a draped red cloth of honor which given the creases appears to have been recently unfolded The high stone wall gives the effect of pushing the figures into the foreground The dark sky conforms with scripture Matthew 27 45 Now from the sixth hour noon there was darkness over all the land unto the ninth hour 3 00 pm King James Bible Cambridge edition The dark sky stark wall cool light and bare ground contribute to the painting s austerity In his first masterpiece The Descent from the Cross c 1435 40 van der Weyden likened the Virgin Mary s suffering during the Crucifixion to Christ s by having her collapse in a pose that mirrored that of his body being removed from the Cross 14 In the Philadelphia painting the faces of the Virgin Mary and Christ mirror each other as do their positions at the center of the red cloths The diptych was executed late in the artist s life and is unique among paintings of the early Northern Renaissance in its utilization of a flat unnaturalistic background to stage figures which are yet typically highly detailed 15 Nonetheless the contrast of vivid primary reds and whites serves to achieve an emotional effect typical of van der Weyden s best work Escorial Crucifixion Edit Crucifixion with the Virgin and St John c 1460 Rogier van der Weyden Escorial Palace Madrid The diptych is most closely related to van der Weyden s Crucifixion with the Virgin and St John c 1450 55 at the Escorial Palace in Madrid 5 The Escorial Crucifixion also presents Christ on the Cross before a draped red cloth and there are similarities in the other figures 16 Van der Weyden painted this for and donated it to the Carthusian monastery in Scheut near Brussels 17 Philip II of Spain bought it from the monastery in 1555 and installed it in a chapel in Segovia before moving it to the Escorial in 1574 5 The diptych s figures are almost two thirds life size those in the towering Escorial painting are fully life size In her master s thesis exploring the influence of Carthusian theology on van der Weyden s Escorial Crucifixion and Crucifixion Diptych Tamytha Cameron Smith argues that the two works are visually unique in the artist s oeuvre because of their extreme starkness simplicity and tendency toward abstraction 18 The traditional deep blue of the Virgin s robe and dark red of St John s robe have been bleached out leaving the garments near white the color of Carthusian robes 19 Smith notes the overwhelming stillness of the diptych and speculates that it may have been van der Weyden s last work 20 In Vita Christi 1374 the Carthusian theologian Ludolph of Saxony introduced the concept of immersing and projecting oneself into a Biblical scene from the life of Christ 21 Ludolph described St John as steadfastly loyal to Christ but also adorned with the brilliancy and beauty conferred by chastity 22 If the Philadelphia diptych was utilized as a Ludolphian devotional painting as the Escorial Crucifixion certainly was a monk could have empathized with the suffering of Christ and the Virgin but also been able to project himself into the scene as the ever loyal and ever chaste St John With this intended function van der Weyden s decision to strip away the extraneous detail present in his other Crucifixions can be seen as having had both an artistic and a practical purpose Conservation Edit Detail of right panel with the gold sky that was added in 1941 The painting was conserved by freelance restorer David Rosen in 1941 under the supervision of Johnson Collection curator Henri Gabriel Marceau Near the upper edge of a panel Rosen found gold paint one of the factors that led him to conclude that the blue black sky was an 18th century addition 23 Rosen scraped away the dark paint and added a gilded sky which was how the diptych was exhibited for half a century 5 Examination of the painting in 1990 by Philadelphia Museum of Art conservator Mark S Tucker showed little justification for this change The traces of gold were minimal and could have been residue from a gold leafed frame 24 Chemical analysis established that the surviving vestiges of blue pigment in the sky contained azurite of the same color and composition as blue pigment in the Virgin s robe which was indisputably original 24 Tucker undertook a thorough cleaning and reversible restoration 1992 93 painting over the gold since Rosen s 1941 restoration had removed almost all of the sky s original paint 24 The 1992 93 restoration has led to new insight about the artist Van der Weyden s broad massing of color in the blue black sky was something new in Northern Renaissance art although common in Italian frescoes The diptych s innovative composition and almost abstract use of color may represent his synthesis of the Italian art that he saw on his 1450 pilgrimage to Rome 25 Provenance EditThe provenance of the painting as far as it is known is as follows 1856 Madrid Catalogue of the collection of Jose de Madrazo nos 659 amp 660 26 June 1867 Paris Auction of the collection of M le Mis de Salamanca lots 165 amp 166 5 About 1905 Paris Art dealer F Kleinberger sells the Christ on the Cross panel to Peter A B Widener and the Virgin and St John panel to John G Johnson 5 1906 Philadelphia United States Johnson purchases Widener s panel and reunites the halves 5 Exhibited in Johnson s house museum at 510 South Broad Street Philadelphia April 1917 Philadelphia Johnson dies The diptych becomes part of his bequest to the City of Philadelphia June 1933 Philadelphia The Johnson Collection is moved to the Philadelphia Museum of Art Gallery EditFour other Crucifixion paintings have been attributed to van der Weyden 27 The Crucifixion c 1425 30 Gemaldegalerie Berlin Abegg Triptych c 1438 40 Abegg Stiftung Riggisberg Crucifixion Triptych c 1440 45 Kunsthistorisches Museum Vienna Triptych of the Seven Sacraments c 1440 45 Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp References Edit The Philadelphia Museum of Art dates the painting c 1460 de Vos dates it slightly later c 1464 65 De Vos 334 35 Crawford Luber Katherine Philadelphia Museum of Art Handbook of the Collections 1995 167 Wilhelm R Valentiner author of the Dutch and Flemish painting volume of the 1914 Johnson Collection catalogue proposes that the panels were the shutters of a triptych Johnson Catalogue 1914 14 a b c d e Tucker New Findings a b c d e f g Johnson Catalogue 1972 94 95 Richardson E P Rogier van der Weyden s Cambrai Altar Art Quarterly Volume 2 1939 57 66 Old Cambrai Cathedral was defaced during the French Revolution and demolished in the 1790s Jolly 113 26 Lawrence C H Medieval Monasticism Forms of Religious Life in Western Europe in the Middle Ages New York and London 1989 133 37 a b Smith 20 Smith 20 21 Smith 17 De Vos 120 Hagen Rose Marie and Rainer What Great Paintings Say Volume 2 Los Angeles CA Taschen America 2003 167 Snyder James Northern Renaissance Art Painting Sculpture The Graphic Arts from 1350 to 1575 Saddle River NJ Prentice Hall 2005 118 Smith 18 There is enough of a resemblance between the Marys and the St Johns to argue that van der Weyden used the same models for both De Vos 291 92 Smith 13 Smith 36 Smith 13 16 McGrath Alister Christian Spirituality An Introduction 1999 84 87 ISBN 978 0 631 21281 2 Coleridge Henry James Hours of the Passion Taken from the Life of Christ by Ludolph the Saxon London 1886 312 quoted in Smith 33 Rosen D Preservation vs Restoration Magazine of Art 34 9 1941 458 71 Van der Weyden s The Descent from the Cross c 1435 40 Beaune Altarpiece c 1445 50 and Medici Madonna c 1460 64 all feature gilded backgrounds harkening back to medievalism a b c Tucker Burlington Magazine Jolly 125 26 De Vos 335 Attribution of work from this period is extremely difficult as Northern Renaissance art fell out of fashion in the early 1510s and was not rediscovered until the mid 19th century Often definitive attributions were not established until the mid 20th century and many works from the period are still disputed Sources Editde Vos Dirk Rogier van der Weyden The Complete Works Harry N Abrams 2000 ISBN 0 8109 6390 6 Jolly P H Rogier van der Weyden s Escorial and Philadelphia Crucifixions and their Relation to Fra Angelico at San Marco Oud Holland 95 1981 Marrow James H Symbol and Meaning in Northern European Art of the Late Middle Ages and the Early Renaissance Simiolus Netherlands Quarterly for the History of Art Volume 16 No 2 3 1986 150 169 Philadelphia Museum of Art John G Johnson Collection Catalogue of Flemish and Dutch Paintings Philadelphia George H Buchanan Co 1972 Johnson Catalogue 1972 Smith Tamytha Cameron Personal Passions and Carthusian Influences Evident in Rogier van der Weyden s Crucified Christ between the Virgin and Saint John and Diptych of the Crucifixion University of North Texas May 2006 Tucker Mark Rogier van der Weyden s Philadelphia Crucifixion The Burlington Magazine 139 1135 October 1997 676 83 Tucker Mark New Findings on the Function of Rogier van der Weyden s Philadelphia Crucifixion Archived 2012 02 26 at the Wayback Machine Paper presented at 2006 world convention of Historians of Netherlandish Art Baltimore Washington D C Valentiner W R Catalogue of a Collection of Paintings and Some Art Objects Volume II 1914 Johnson Catalogue 1914 External links EditChristopher D M Atkins and Mark S Tucker The Crucifixion with the Virgin and Saint John the Evangelist Mourning permanent dead link in The John G Johnson Collection A History and Selected Works permanent dead link a Philadelphia Museum of Art free digital scholarly catalogue The Crucifixion with the Virgin and Saint John the Evangelist Mourning from Philadelphia Museum of Art Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Crucifixion Diptych van der Weyden amp oldid 1113437491, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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