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Miraflores Altarpiece

The Miraflores Altarpiece (or Triptych of the Virgin, or The Altar of Our Lady or the Mary Altarpiece) is a c. 1442-5 oil-on-oak wood panel altarpiece by the Early Netherlandish painter Rogier van der Weyden, in the Gemäldegalerie, Berlin since 1850.[1][2] The three panels are each 71 x 43 cm and show, from left to right, a portrait of the Holy Family, a Pietà (the Virgin cradling the dead body of Jesus) and Christ's appearance to Mary—a chronological reading of the birth, death and resurrection of Jesus,[3] with Mary the focus of both wings. The altarpiece examines Mary's relationship with Christ at different stages of his life. It is notable for its use of colour, distinguished by its use of whites, reds and blues, and use of line—notably the line of Christ's body in the central panel—and, typically of van der Weyden, its emotional impact.[4]

Typical for triptychs of the period, the altarpiece is rich in religious symbolism; each panel is framed by a rounded arch with Gothic decorations in open tracery below and in the spandrel. Each is lined with highly detailed simulated relief sculptures, with complicated iconography.[5] The altarpiece influenced contemporary painters, especially in the use of symbolically decorated portals placed as imaginary reliefs in the framing arches. It informed works by Petrus Christus, Dirk Bouts[6] and Hans Memling.[7][8]

Miraflores Altarpiece
Oil on panel, 220.5cm × 259.5 cm. Gemäldegalerie, Berlin.

The triptych edit

Overview edit

Each panel is framed by an arch or doorway and seems to be positioned within church portals, in interior spaces that give the appearance of taking place on a stage. The front of each frame contains the facing of a step, which, according to art historian Jeffrey Chipps Smith, implies "the viewer's proximity to, and potential for imaginatively entering into, the divine stage."[9] In contrast to most triptychs of the time, the panels were originally fixed and not hinged, although they were later broken apart and reassembled as movable.[10] Each is remarkably free of the pictorial traditions generally used when depicting these episodes. The Holy Family panel shows none of the other figures usually represented in pictures of the birth or infancy of Christ. Many of the elements are van der Weyden's own inventions, for example the winding path in the right panel does not refer to any previous representation or biblical text. It is a temporal device to link the resurrected Christ with the figure who appears before Mary.[11][12]

The different colours of Mary's robes in each panel bear symbolic meaning; the white, red and blues are intended to depict her three traditional virtues; respectively purity, compassion and perseverance. She is shown in pure white in the family panel to underscore her perpetual virginity, in red (a predominant colour in the triptych) as she mourns her son, and in blue as he reappears to her.[13]

The framing arch of each panel is historiated, containing series of small and imagined but highly detailed and symbolic, protruding or raised, marble statues which augment the narrative of the particular episode from Christ's life.[3] The triptych is often associated with van der Weyden's other John the Baptist altarpiece as both utilise imagined stone reliefs both as framing devices and as a means to develop on the main theme of the particular panel. The arches are painted in browns, likely to give the appearance of timber. They are fantastic rather than realistic, serving as a device to include the small relief figures located in the archivolts which reflect on and accentuate the narrative and theme of the panel on which they appear.[10]

Panels edit

The left-hand wing shows Mary dressed in a violet-white robe, looking at the infant Christ as he returns her gaze. Beside them a seated Saint Joseph is dressed in red with a long head-dress, dozing as he leans on a staff. The hem of Mary's robe is inscribed in golden script containing text from the "Canticle of Mary" of Luke 1:46–48.; My soul doth magnify the Lord....[14] This panel was long assumed to be a Nativity until described by art historian Erwin Panofsky as a simple representation of the Holy Family.[11] The accompanying reliefs show moments of the Life of Christ; key events from his infancy to the Presentation at the Temple.[3]

 
Van der Weyden's c. 1455 Altar of Saint John. Gemäldegalerie, Berlin. This triptych is linked to the Miraflores in its shared symbolic motifs, most notably the winding pathway, doorway and perspective tiles.[12]

In the centre panel, Mary is shown in a red robe holding the Christ's lifeless long body. Saint Peter and Luke the Evangelist stand on either side of her. Both are dressed in black clothes, and represent, the foundation of the early Church and the Gospels, respectively.[3] The right-hand panel shows the moment (not in any of the Gospels) when Christ appears to his mother after his Resurrection, which is repeated at a smaller scale in the distance through the open doorway at rear. Although van der Weyden had otherwise presented the chronology of the triptych from left to right, the background resurrection is to the right of the Appearance in the foreground. The sequence is suggested by the picture's depth (in that the scene in the foreground is chronologically the more recent), and by the long winding path that leads from the tomb to the interior.

The artist uses a number of pictorial devices to suggest the approach of the risen Christ, including the winding path, the doors which open inwards, and the exterior light falling on the interior tiles.[12] The archway reliefs include representations of the Old Testament antecedents to The Passion, including the Death of Absalom and the Binding of Isaac.[3]

The panels are in good condition and have not suffered significant damage. They were cleaned in 1981 when layers of discoloured and ruined varnishes were removed.[15] Technical examination shows that Rogier made a number of changes to the final poses.[16]

Versions, authenticity and provenance edit

 
Posthumous portrait of Queen Isabel of Castile. Her father John II knew Jan van Eyck who had died by the time the painting was commissioned. Instead John enlisted van der Weyden. It is believed that Isabel was so impressed by the work that she in turn commissioned a copy (now in New York) from a member of van der Weyden's workshop or a follower.[17]

Two nearly identical but slightly smaller copies survive, in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York and in the Royal Chapel of Granada. This Berlin original comes from the collection of Isabella I of Castile and was long thought to be the original of the two. As late as 1956, art historian Max Friedlænder wrote that "since the Granada version became known, the Berlin replica has been ignored as of no importance. The Berlin altarpiece is unusually well-preserved; it is in some respects inferior to the Granada work but can hardly be other than an extremely careful and highly successful workshop replica."[18] More recent studies of the under-drawing and paint show that the Granada/New York version was executed after the Berlin panels,[9] while dendrochronological examination of the oak carried out in 1982 dates it after 1492; van der Weyden is known to have died in 1464.[19] Study of the Berlin work reveals a heartwood ring from 1406, and approximates a felling date for the timber in the early 1420s.[20]

The Altarpiece was stolen by General Darmagnac during the Peninsular War, as a part of the Napoleonic looting of art in Spain. The triptych was largely forgotten and ignored until the early 20th century. It was not identified as a van der Weyden until attributed in the early 1950s by Max Friedlænder in his pioneering 14-volume Masterpieces of Netherlandish painting of the 15th and 16th centuries.[21] The attribution came from the verification of a 1445 document describing the triptych as of the hand of "the great and famous Fleming Rogel". The Granada and New York versions, until this point considered originals, were recognised as copies, now thought made around 1500 by a Castile painter who most likely served his apprentiship in the Low Countries. It has been suggested that both come from Juan de Flandes, but there is no conclusive proof.[16] Panofsky, also writing in the 1950s, expanded on Friedlænder's work, and detailed the complex iconography of the altarpiece.[21]

Further, infrared reflectography shows that changes were made to the composition before its completion, proving that it is not the work of a copyist. The triptych was commissioned by Isabella's father John II who donated it to the Miraflores Carthusian monastery, near Burgos, Spain, around 1445.[3] Most likely, Isabella ordered a copy of the Berlin work as such altarpieces were then "prized for their spiritual powers or for the status of their authorship and/or ownership".[17]

See also edit

References edit

Notes
  1. ^ Gemäldegalerie, Berlin. Prestel Verlag: Prestel Museum Guide, 1998. 47. ISBN 3-7913-1912-4
  2. ^ "Der Miraflores-Altar". Staatliche Museen zu Berlin (Berlin State Museums). Retrieved 2024-04-22.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Chipps Smith, 172
  4. ^ Drees, 501
  5. ^ Lane, 655
  6. ^ Hand & Wolff, 44 & 46
  7. ^ As well as a host of lesser, forgotten painters
  8. ^ Chipps Smith, 174
  9. ^ a b Chipps Smith, 173
  10. ^ a b Richardson, 86
  11. ^ a b Blum, 18
  12. ^ a b c Acres, Alfred. "The Columba Altarpiece and the Time of the World". The Art Bulletin, Volume 80, No. 3, 1998. 422-51
  13. ^ Koch, 513
  14. ^ Chipps Smith, 172–173
  15. ^ Grosshans, G. "Rogier van der Weyden, Der Marienaltar aus der Kartause Miraflores". Jar buch der Berliner Mussen, vol 23, 1981. 49-112
  16. ^ a b Cambell, 126
  17. ^ a b "Christ Appearing to His Mother". Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Retrieved 15 October 2011.
  18. ^ Friedlænder, 17
  19. ^ Ridderbos et al, 298
  20. ^ Taft, 214
  21. ^ a b McNamee
Sources
  • Blum, Shirley. Early Netherlandish Triptychs: A Study in Patronage. Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1969.
  • Campbell, Lorne. Van der Weyden. London: Chaucer Press, 2004. ISBN 1-904449-24-7
  • Chipps Smith, Jeffrey. The Northern Renaissance. London: Phaidon Press, 2004. ISBN 0-7148-3867-5
  • Drees, Clayton. "The Late Medieval Age of Crisis and Renewal, 1300–1500". Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2001.
  • Friedlænder, Max. "Early Netherlandish Painting: From Van Eyck to Bruegel". Garden City, NY: Phaidon Publishers, 1956.
  • Hand, John Oliver; Wolff, Martha. Early Netherlandish Painting. London: National Gallery of Art, 1987.
  • Koch, Robert. "The Getty 'Annunciation' by Dieric Bouts". The Burlington Magazine, Volume 130. London, July 1988.
  • Lane, Barbara. "Rogier's Saint John and Miraflores Altarpieces Reconsidered". The Art Bulletin, Volume 60, No. 4, December, pp. 655–672, 1978.
  • McNamee, Maurice. "Vested Angels". Peeters Publishers, 1998. VII. ISBN 90-429-0007-5
  • Richardson, Carol. Locating Renaissance Art. Yale University Press, 2007. ISBN 0-300-12188-1
  • Ridderbos, Bernhard; Van Buren, Anne; Van Veen, Henk. Early Netherlandish Paintings: Rediscovery, Reception, and Research. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2005. ISBN 90-5356-614-7
  • Taft, Stanley, Newman, Richard; Kuniholm, Peter; Stulik, Dusan. "The Science of Paintings". Springer; 1st ed. 2000. ISBN 0-387-98722-3
Further reading
  • Kemperdick, Stephan. Rogier van der Weyden : 1399/1400-1464. H.F. Ullmann, 2007. ISBN 3-8331-3842-4
  • Panofsky, Erwin. Early Netherlandish Painting; Its Origins and Character. Harvard University Press, 1953. 262

miraflores, altarpiece, triptych, virgin, altar, lady, mary, altarpiece, 1442, wood, panel, altarpiece, early, netherlandish, painter, rogier, weyden, gemäldegalerie, berlin, since, 1850, three, panels, each, show, from, left, right, portrait, holy, family, pi. The Miraflores Altarpiece or Triptych of the Virgin or The Altar of Our Lady or the Mary Altarpiece is a c 1442 5 oil on oak wood panel altarpiece by the Early Netherlandish painter Rogier van der Weyden in the Gemaldegalerie Berlin since 1850 1 2 The three panels are each 71 x 43 cm and show from left to right a portrait of the Holy Family a Pieta the Virgin cradling the dead body of Jesus and Christ s appearance to Mary a chronological reading of the birth death and resurrection of Jesus 3 with Mary the focus of both wings The altarpiece examines Mary s relationship with Christ at different stages of his life It is notable for its use of colour distinguished by its use of whites reds and blues and use of line notably the line of Christ s body in the central panel and typically of van der Weyden its emotional impact 4 Typical for triptychs of the period the altarpiece is rich in religious symbolism each panel is framed by a rounded arch with Gothic decorations in open tracery below and in the spandrel Each is lined with highly detailed simulated relief sculptures with complicated iconography 5 The altarpiece influenced contemporary painters especially in the use of symbolically decorated portals placed as imaginary reliefs in the framing arches It informed works by Petrus Christus Dirk Bouts 6 and Hans Memling 7 8 Miraflores AltarpieceOil on panel 220 5cm 259 5 cm Gemaldegalerie Berlin Contents 1 The triptych 1 1 Overview 1 2 Panels 2 Versions authenticity and provenance 3 See also 4 ReferencesThe triptych editOverview edit Each panel is framed by an arch or doorway and seems to be positioned within church portals in interior spaces that give the appearance of taking place on a stage The front of each frame contains the facing of a step which according to art historian Jeffrey Chipps Smith implies the viewer s proximity to and potential for imaginatively entering into the divine stage 9 In contrast to most triptychs of the time the panels were originally fixed and not hinged although they were later broken apart and reassembled as movable 10 Each is remarkably free of the pictorial traditions generally used when depicting these episodes The Holy Family panel shows none of the other figures usually represented in pictures of the birth or infancy of Christ Many of the elements are van der Weyden s own inventions for example the winding path in the right panel does not refer to any previous representation or biblical text It is a temporal device to link the resurrected Christ with the figure who appears before Mary 11 12 The different colours of Mary s robes in each panel bear symbolic meaning the white red and blues are intended to depict her three traditional virtues respectively purity compassion and perseverance She is shown in pure white in the family panel to underscore her perpetual virginity in red a predominant colour in the triptych as she mourns her son and in blue as he reappears to her 13 The framing arch of each panel is historiated containing series of small and imagined but highly detailed and symbolic protruding or raised marble statues which augment the narrative of the particular episode from Christ s life 3 The triptych is often associated with van der Weyden s other John the Baptist altarpiece as both utilise imagined stone reliefs both as framing devices and as a means to develop on the main theme of the particular panel The arches are painted in browns likely to give the appearance of timber They are fantastic rather than realistic serving as a device to include the small relief figures located in the archivolts which reflect on and accentuate the narrative and theme of the panel on which they appear 10 Panels edit The left hand wing shows Mary dressed in a violet white robe looking at the infant Christ as he returns her gaze Beside them a seated Saint Joseph is dressed in red with a long head dress dozing as he leans on a staff The hem of Mary s robe is inscribed in golden script containing text from the Canticle of Mary of Luke 1 46 48 My soul doth magnify the Lord 14 This panel was long assumed to be a Nativity until described by art historian Erwin Panofsky as a simple representation of the Holy Family 11 The accompanying reliefs show moments of the Life of Christ key events from his infancy to the Presentation at the Temple 3 nbsp Van der Weyden s c 1455 Altar of Saint John Gemaldegalerie Berlin This triptych is linked to the Miraflores in its shared symbolic motifs most notably the winding pathway doorway and perspective tiles 12 In the centre panel Mary is shown in a red robe holding the Christ s lifeless long body Saint Peter and Luke the Evangelist stand on either side of her Both are dressed in black clothes and represent the foundation of the early Church and the Gospels respectively 3 The right hand panel shows the moment not in any of the Gospels when Christ appears to his mother after his Resurrection which is repeated at a smaller scale in the distance through the open doorway at rear Although van der Weyden had otherwise presented the chronology of the triptych from left to right the background resurrection is to the right of the Appearance in the foreground The sequence is suggested by the picture s depth in that the scene in the foreground is chronologically the more recent and by the long winding path that leads from the tomb to the interior The artist uses a number of pictorial devices to suggest the approach of the risen Christ including the winding path the doors which open inwards and the exterior light falling on the interior tiles 12 The archway reliefs include representations of the Old Testament antecedents to The Passion including the Death of Absalom and the Binding of Isaac 3 The panels are in good condition and have not suffered significant damage They were cleaned in 1981 when layers of discoloured and ruined varnishes were removed 15 Technical examination shows that Rogier made a number of changes to the final poses 16 Versions authenticity and provenance edit nbsp Posthumous portrait of Queen Isabel of Castile Her father John II knew Jan van Eyck who had died by the time the painting was commissioned Instead John enlisted van der Weyden It is believed that Isabel was so impressed by the work that she in turn commissioned a copy now in New York from a member of van der Weyden s workshop or a follower 17 Two nearly identical but slightly smaller copies survive in the Metropolitan Museum of Art New York and in the Royal Chapel of Granada This Berlin original comes from the collection of Isabella I of Castile and was long thought to be the original of the two As late as 1956 art historian Max Friedlaender wrote that since the Granada version became known the Berlin replica has been ignored as of no importance The Berlin altarpiece is unusually well preserved it is in some respects inferior to the Granada work but can hardly be other than an extremely careful and highly successful workshop replica 18 More recent studies of the under drawing and paint show that the Granada New York version was executed after the Berlin panels 9 while dendrochronological examination of the oak carried out in 1982 dates it after 1492 van der Weyden is known to have died in 1464 19 Study of the Berlin work reveals a heartwood ring from 1406 and approximates a felling date for the timber in the early 1420s 20 The Altarpiece was stolen by General Darmagnac during the Peninsular War as a part of the Napoleonic looting of art in Spain The triptych was largely forgotten and ignored until the early 20th century It was not identified as a van der Weyden until attributed in the early 1950s by Max Friedlaender in his pioneering 14 volume Masterpieces of Netherlandish painting of the 15th and 16th centuries 21 The attribution came from the verification of a 1445 document describing the triptych as of the hand of the great and famous Fleming Rogel The Granada and New York versions until this point considered originals were recognised as copies now thought made around 1500 by a Castile painter who most likely served his apprentiship in the Low Countries It has been suggested that both come from Juan de Flandes but there is no conclusive proof 16 Panofsky also writing in the 1950s expanded on Friedlaender s work and detailed the complex iconography of the altarpiece 21 Further infrared reflectography shows that changes were made to the composition before its completion proving that it is not the work of a copyist The triptych was commissioned by Isabella s father John II who donated it to the Miraflores Carthusian monastery near Burgos Spain around 1445 3 Most likely Isabella ordered a copy of the Berlin work as such altarpieces were then prized for their spiritual powers or for the status of their authorship and or ownership 17 See also editList of works by Rogier van der WeydenReferences editNotes Gemaldegalerie Berlin Prestel Verlag Prestel Museum Guide 1998 47 ISBN 3 7913 1912 4 Der Miraflores Altar Staatliche Museen zu Berlin Berlin State Museums Retrieved 2024 04 22 a b c d e f Chipps Smith 172 Drees 501 Lane 655 Hand amp Wolff 44 amp 46 As well as a host of lesser forgotten painters Chipps Smith 174 a b Chipps Smith 173 a b Richardson 86 a b Blum 18 a b c Acres Alfred The Columba Altarpiece and the Time of the World The Art Bulletin Volume 80 No 3 1998 422 51 Koch 513 Chipps Smith 172 173 Grosshans G Rogier van der Weyden Der Marienaltar aus der Kartause Miraflores Jar buch der Berliner Mussen vol 23 1981 49 112 a b Cambell 126 a b Christ Appearing to His Mother Metropolitan Museum of Art New York Retrieved 15 October 2011 Friedlaender 17 Ridderbos et al 298 Taft 214 a b McNamee Sources Blum Shirley Early Netherlandish Triptychs A Study in Patronage Los Angeles University of California Press 1969 Campbell Lorne Van der Weyden London Chaucer Press 2004 ISBN 1 904449 24 7 Chipps Smith Jeffrey The Northern Renaissance London Phaidon Press 2004 ISBN 0 7148 3867 5 Drees Clayton The Late Medieval Age of Crisis and Renewal 1300 1500 Westport CT Greenwood Press 2001 Friedlaender Max Early Netherlandish Painting From Van Eyck to Bruegel Garden City NY Phaidon Publishers 1956 Hand John Oliver Wolff Martha Early Netherlandish Painting London National Gallery of Art 1987 Koch Robert The Getty Annunciation by Dieric Bouts The Burlington Magazine Volume 130 London July 1988 Lane Barbara Rogier s Saint John and Miraflores Altarpieces Reconsidered The Art Bulletin Volume 60 No 4 December pp 655 672 1978 McNamee Maurice Vested Angels Peeters Publishers 1998 VII ISBN 90 429 0007 5 Richardson Carol Locating Renaissance Art Yale University Press 2007 ISBN 0 300 12188 1 Ridderbos Bernhard Van Buren Anne Van Veen Henk Early Netherlandish Paintings Rediscovery Reception and Research Amsterdam Amsterdam University Press 2005 ISBN 90 5356 614 7 Taft Stanley Newman Richard Kuniholm Peter Stulik Dusan The Science of Paintings Springer 1st ed 2000 ISBN 0 387 98722 3 Further reading Kemperdick Stephan Rogier van der Weyden 1399 1400 1464 H F Ullmann 2007 ISBN 3 8331 3842 4 Panofsky Erwin Early Netherlandish Painting Its Origins and Character Harvard University Press 1953 262 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Miraflores Altarpiece amp oldid 1220273516, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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