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Braque Triptych

The Braque Triptych (or the Braque Family Triptych) is a c. 1452 oil-on-oak altarpiece by the Early Netherlandish painter Rogier van der Weyden. When open, its three half-length panels reveal, from left to right, John the Baptist, The Virgin Mary with Jesus and Saint John the Evangelist, and on the right, Mary Magdalene. When the wings are closed, the work shows a vanitas motif of a skull and cross.

Interior panels of the Braque Triptych. c. 1452. Oil on oak panels with frame, 41cm × 34.5cm; 41cm× 68cm; 41cm × 34.5cm. Musée du Louvre, Paris.
The outer panels shown folded. The skull is likely intended as both a memento mori and a memorial for the patron.

The Braque Triptych is the only surviving devotional work by van der Weyden known to be painted for private rather than public display.[1] The altarpiece was probably commissioned by either Jehan Braque of Tournai or, more likely, his wife Catherine de Brabant – possibly after Jehan's sudden and early death in 1452. The couple had been married for only a brief period. Catherine was much younger than her husband; when they married in 1450 or early 1451, she was 20 and some 12 or 13 years his junior. She evidently held a deep and lasting affection for him. When she died, almost 50 years after him, she had asked to be buried alongside him, despite remarrying years earlier.[2]

Triptych

 
Detail of the landscape behind John the Baptist. As with the disembodied text, the landscape segues across the panel to form a continuous whole.

Inscription and free floating text play a major role in the work. Each interior panel contains Latin inscriptions issuing from the figures' mouths or floating above them, serving as either speech bubbles or commentary. They are echoed by the words inscribed on the cross of the left exterior panel. The texts are all taken from the Gospel of John, except for that of the Virgin's, which comes from the Gospel of Luke. The words of John the Baptist curve upwards from his mouth to the top right corner of the frame, and seem to join those of the Virgin in the center panel, which in turn flow along the top of the center panel.[3]

The words of the Magdalen, in contrast, form a flat horizontal line, breaking the curved left to right continuity of the text of the left and central panels. Similarly The Magdalene's words differ from that of the other panels; they are not uttered by her and instead consist as a detached commentary on her. It is perhaps because of this that they are not rendered with, as art historian Alfred Acres puts it, the "sinuous grace" of the others, as they are "words written of the Magdalene not spoken or written by her."[4] Her text, from John 12:3, reads Mary therefore took a pound of ointment of right spikenard, of great price, and anointed the feet of Jesus.[4]

Interior

 
Detail, Mary, center panel

Van der Weyden had used the technique of floating inscriptions earlier, notably in the center panel of his c. 1445–50 Beaune Altarpiece, where words appear to float in the pictorial space or are seemingly sewn into the clothes of the figures.[5]

The left panel is a half-length depiction of John the Baptist,[6] with a background showing a scene from the baptism of Christ. John's words float above him as a curved speech balloon which emits from his mouth. The words, taken from John 1:29, read "Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sins of the world".[7] In the right hand panel Mary Magdalene is depicted in sumptuous and highly detailed dress in an image considered to be one of the finest of van der Weyden's female portraits. At 68 cm wide, the center panel is almost twice the breadth of the left and right panels. It shows Christ Salvator Mundi,[8] his head a near-replica of his depiction in the Last Judgment triptych.[1] The center panel acts as a "picture within a picture", the context of which is "narrated" by the balloons from the mouths of John and Mary.

 
Detail showing the Magdalene

John the Evangelist and Jesus' right hands are raised in the traditional Christian pose or gesture of the teacher. Their index and middle fingers are held upright while their two small fingers are close to their thumbs.[9] The hand gestures and fingers of each saint are arranged in a highly deliberate and symmetrical manner. The pattern they form across the three interior panels echoes the narrative of the triptych as indicated by the balloons. However, the flow is interrupted in the Magdalene panel, her hand is raised vertically as if a barrier to the other panels, while her text is in a straight horizontal rather than curved.

Exterior

When the wings are closed across the central panel, the exterior reveals a memento mori[10] or vanitas motif of a skull and cross with is decorated with Latin inscriptions. The outer left hand wing shows a yellow-brown skull leaning against a broken brick or stone fragment[11] alongside the coat of arms of the Braque family – a sheaf of wheat – seen on the upper right portion of the panel.[1] It has been suggested that the skull is a future state representation of the viewer.[1][12]

 
The outer panels shown folded. The skull is likely intended as both a memento mori and a memorial for the patron.

The panel is one of the earliest known examples of a skull used in a vanitas, while the broken brick, cross and inscriptions present imagery of death and decay typical of the genre.[13] Brick in such works usually symbolise ruin, either of buildings or a dynasties, in this case given the inclusion of the Braque family crest, it can be assumed to serve as reminder to members of the latter.[14] Other art historians believe that the skull may not have been symbolically relevant to the Braque family, as they were well-established as advisers and financiers to the House of Valois.[1] Instead, the argue, it may represent Adam, or a piece of Golgotha.[1]

The right panel contains a cross with a Latin inscription based on Ecclesiasticus XLI: 1–2. The words read as o mors quam amara est memoria tua homini pacem habenti in substantiis suis. viro quieto et cuius viae directae sunt in omnibus et adhuc valenti accipere cibum (O death, how bitter is the remembrance of thee to a man that hath peace in his possessions! To a man that is at rest, and whose ways are prosperous in all things, and that is yet able to take meat!).

Provenance

The approximate dating of the triptych is based the death of Jehan Braque in 1452,[15] and the fact that the interior panels show an Italian influence, and is considered one of the first of his later more austere mature period works; van der Wyeden had visited Italy in 1450.

It is first mentioned, unattributed, in Catherine de Brabant's 1497 will when she left it to her grandson Jehan Villain. Records show the altarpiece in the possession of her heirs until 1586, after which it was purchased by a priest in England. It later came into the possession of the English painter Richard Evans. It was purchased by the Musée du Louvre from the writer and benefactor Lady Theodora Guest, in 1913.[16] At the time, it was considered the most important acquisition by the public gallery since 1878 when they were bequeathed a major work by Hans Memling. At the time it was a record price paid for a van der Weyden; J. P. Morgan had earlier spent $100,000 on the Annunciation now in the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art.[7][17][18]

Today it is on permanent display in the Louvre, in its original oak frame. Because of its fragility, it is encased in glass.

Sources

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Blum, 30
  2. ^ Blum, 30–31
  3. ^ Acres, 89
  4. ^ a b Acres, 88
  5. ^ Acres, 86–87
  6. ^ Lane, 281
  7. ^ a b Campbell, 89
  8. ^ Acres, 87
  9. ^ McNamee, 1
  10. ^ Engel, 215
  11. ^ Blum, 31
  12. ^ Bätschmann and Griener, 152
  13. ^ Lamb, 43
  14. ^ Baudrillard, 178
  15. ^ Leprieur, 273
  16. ^ Blum, 127
  17. ^ Unattributed. "Louvre Acquires a Van Der Weyden. Pays $130,000 for Masterpiece from Duke of Westminster's Collection". The New York Times, 24 July 1913. Retrieved 12 May 2012.
  18. ^ "The Annunciation by Rogier Van Der Weyden". Bulletin of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 12 May 2012.

Bibliography

  • Acres, Alfred. "Rogier van der Weyden's Painted Texts". Artibus et Historiae, Volume 21, No. 41, 2000
  • Blum, Shirley. Early Netherlandish Triptychs; A Study in Patronage. University of California Press, 1970. ISBN 0-520-01444-8
  • Bätschmann Oskar; Griener, Pascal. Hans Holbein. Reaktion Books, ISBN 1-86189-040-0
  • Campbell, Lorne. Van der Weyden. London: Chaucer Press, 2004. ISBN 1-904449-24-7
  • Engel, William. The Persistence of Memory and Melancholy in Early Modern England. Amherst MA: University of Massachusetts Press, 1995.
  • Jacobs, Lynn F. Opening Doors: The Early Netherlandish Triptych Reinterpreted. University Park: Penn State University Press, 2012. ISBN 0-271-04840-9
  • Lamb Jonathan. "The Rape of the Lock as Still Life", in The secret life of things: animals, objects, and it-narratives in eighteenth-century England. Associated University Press, 2007.
  • Lane, Barbara. "Early Italian Sources for the Braque Triptych". The Art Bulletin, Volume LX11, No. 2, June 1980. 281–284
  • Leprieur, Paul. "Un triptyque de Roger de la Pasture". Gazette des Beaux-Arts, volume 10, 1913. 257-80
  • McNamee, Maurice. Vested Angels: Eucharistic Allusions in Early Netherlandish Paintings. Leuven: Peeters Publishers,1998. ISBN 90-429-0007-5

External links

  •   Media related to Braque Triptych at Wikimedia Commons

braque, triptych, braque, family, triptych, 1452, altarpiece, early, netherlandish, painter, rogier, weyden, when, open, three, half, length, panels, reveal, from, left, right, john, baptist, virgin, mary, with, jesus, saint, john, evangelist, right, mary, mag. The Braque Triptych or the Braque Family Triptych is a c 1452 oil on oak altarpiece by the Early Netherlandish painter Rogier van der Weyden When open its three half length panels reveal from left to right John the Baptist The Virgin Mary with Jesus and Saint John the Evangelist and on the right Mary Magdalene When the wings are closed the work shows a vanitas motif of a skull and cross Interior panels of the Braque Triptych c 1452 Oil on oak panels with frame 41cm 34 5cm 41cm 68cm 41cm 34 5cm Musee du Louvre Paris The outer panels shown folded The skull is likely intended as both a memento mori and a memorial for the patron The Braque Triptych is the only surviving devotional work by van der Weyden known to be painted for private rather than public display 1 The altarpiece was probably commissioned by either Jehan Braque of Tournai or more likely his wife Catherine de Brabant possibly after Jehan s sudden and early death in 1452 The couple had been married for only a brief period Catherine was much younger than her husband when they married in 1450 or early 1451 she was 20 and some 12 or 13 years his junior She evidently held a deep and lasting affection for him When she died almost 50 years after him she had asked to be buried alongside him despite remarrying years earlier 2 Contents 1 Triptych 1 1 Interior 1 2 Exterior 2 Provenance 3 Sources 3 1 References 3 2 Bibliography 4 External linksTriptych Edit Detail of the landscape behind John the Baptist As with the disembodied text the landscape segues across the panel to form a continuous whole Inscription and free floating text play a major role in the work Each interior panel contains Latin inscriptions issuing from the figures mouths or floating above them serving as either speech bubbles or commentary They are echoed by the words inscribed on the cross of the left exterior panel The texts are all taken from the Gospel of John except for that of the Virgin s which comes from the Gospel of Luke The words of John the Baptist curve upwards from his mouth to the top right corner of the frame and seem to join those of the Virgin in the center panel which in turn flow along the top of the center panel 3 The words of the Magdalen in contrast form a flat horizontal line breaking the curved left to right continuity of the text of the left and central panels Similarly The Magdalene s words differ from that of the other panels they are not uttered by her and instead consist as a detached commentary on her It is perhaps because of this that they are not rendered with as art historian Alfred Acres puts it the sinuous grace of the others as they are words written of the Magdalene not spoken or written by her 4 Her text from John 12 3 reads Mary therefore took a pound of ointment of right spikenard of great price and anointed the feet of Jesus 4 Interior Edit Detail Mary center panel Van der Weyden had used the technique of floating inscriptions earlier notably in the center panel of his c 1445 50 Beaune Altarpiece where words appear to float in the pictorial space or are seemingly sewn into the clothes of the figures 5 The left panel is a half length depiction of John the Baptist 6 with a background showing a scene from the baptism of Christ John s words float above him as a curved speech balloon which emits from his mouth The words taken from John 1 29 read Behold the Lamb of God which taketh away the sins of the world 7 In the right hand panel Mary Magdalene is depicted in sumptuous and highly detailed dress in an image considered to be one of the finest of van der Weyden s female portraits At 68 cm wide the center panel is almost twice the breadth of the left and right panels It shows Christ Salvator Mundi 8 his head a near replica of his depiction in the Last Judgment triptych 1 The center panel acts as a picture within a picture the context of which is narrated by the balloons from the mouths of John and Mary Detail showing the Magdalene John the Evangelist and Jesus right hands are raised in the traditional Christian pose or gesture of the teacher Their index and middle fingers are held upright while their two small fingers are close to their thumbs 9 The hand gestures and fingers of each saint are arranged in a highly deliberate and symmetrical manner The pattern they form across the three interior panels echoes the narrative of the triptych as indicated by the balloons However the flow is interrupted in the Magdalene panel her hand is raised vertically as if a barrier to the other panels while her text is in a straight horizontal rather than curved Exterior Edit When the wings are closed across the central panel the exterior reveals a memento mori 10 or vanitas motif of a skull and cross with is decorated with Latin inscriptions The outer left hand wing shows a yellow brown skull leaning against a broken brick or stone fragment 11 alongside the coat of arms of the Braque family a sheaf of wheat seen on the upper right portion of the panel 1 It has been suggested that the skull is a future state representation of the viewer 1 12 The outer panels shown folded The skull is likely intended as both a memento mori and a memorial for the patron The panel is one of the earliest known examples of a skull used in a vanitas while the broken brick cross and inscriptions present imagery of death and decay typical of the genre 13 Brick in such works usually symbolise ruin either of buildings or a dynasties in this case given the inclusion of the Braque family crest it can be assumed to serve as reminder to members of the latter 14 Other art historians believe that the skull may not have been symbolically relevant to the Braque family as they were well established as advisers and financiers to the House of Valois 1 Instead the argue it may represent Adam or a piece of Golgotha 1 The right panel contains a cross with a Latin inscription based on Ecclesiasticus XLI 1 2 The words read as o mors quam amara est memoria tua homini pacem habenti in substantiis suis viro quieto et cuius viae directae sunt in omnibus et adhuc valenti accipere cibum O death how bitter is the remembrance of thee to a man that hath peace in his possessions To a man that is at rest and whose ways are prosperous in all things and that is yet able to take meat Provenance EditThe approximate dating of the triptych is based the death of Jehan Braque in 1452 15 and the fact that the interior panels show an Italian influence and is considered one of the first of his later more austere mature period works van der Wyeden had visited Italy in 1450 It is first mentioned unattributed in Catherine de Brabant s 1497 will when she left it to her grandson Jehan Villain Records show the altarpiece in the possession of her heirs until 1586 after which it was purchased by a priest in England It later came into the possession of the English painter Richard Evans It was purchased by the Musee du Louvre from the writer and benefactor Lady Theodora Guest in 1913 16 At the time it was considered the most important acquisition by the public gallery since 1878 when they were bequeathed a major work by Hans Memling At the time it was a record price paid for a van der Weyden J P Morgan had earlier spent 100 000 on the Annunciation now in the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art 7 17 18 Today it is on permanent display in the Louvre in its original oak frame Because of its fragility it is encased in glass Sources EditReferences Edit a b c d e f Blum 30 Blum 30 31 Acres 89 a b Acres 88 Acres 86 87 Lane 281 a b Campbell 89 Acres 87 McNamee 1 Engel 215 Blum 31 Batschmann and Griener 152 Lamb 43 Baudrillard 178 Leprieur 273 Blum 127 Unattributed Louvre Acquires a Van Der Weyden Pays 130 000 for Masterpiece from Duke of Westminster s Collection The New York Times 24 July 1913 Retrieved 12 May 2012 The Annunciation by Rogier Van Der Weyden Bulletin of the Metropolitan Museum of Art Retrieved 12 May 2012 Bibliography Edit Acres Alfred Rogier van der Weyden s Painted Texts Artibus et Historiae Volume 21 No 41 2000 Blum Shirley Early Netherlandish Triptychs A Study in Patronage University of California Press 1970 ISBN 0 520 01444 8 Batschmann Oskar Griener Pascal Hans Holbein Reaktion Books ISBN 1 86189 040 0 Campbell Lorne Van der Weyden London Chaucer Press 2004 ISBN 1 904449 24 7 Engel William The Persistence of Memory and Melancholy in Early Modern England Amherst MA University of Massachusetts Press 1995 Jacobs Lynn F Opening Doors The Early Netherlandish Triptych Reinterpreted University Park Penn State University Press 2012 ISBN 0 271 04840 9 Lamb Jonathan The Rape of the Lock as Still Life in The secret life of things animals objects and it narratives in eighteenth century England Associated University Press 2007 Lane Barbara Early Italian Sources for the Braque Triptych The Art Bulletin Volume LX11 No 2 June 1980 281 284 Leprieur Paul Un triptyque de Roger de la Pasture Gazette des Beaux Arts volume 10 1913 257 80 McNamee Maurice Vested Angels Eucharistic Allusions in Early Netherlandish Paintings Leuven Peeters Publishers 1998 ISBN 90 429 0007 5External links Edit Media related to Braque Triptych at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Braque Triptych amp oldid 1128072325, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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