Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Brugge Art

Followers of this blog know that we have a special interest in and affection for the art of the later Medieval and Renaissance North. Where we are now, in the so-called Low Countries, is where it began. Much of that art was dispersed to the invading Spanish and Hapsburg armies and courts and cities over the centuries. And indeed we have seen it all over Europe. All over. Everywhere. (Ask me about Bosch and the Prado). It was Jan van Eyck, in the early 1400s, who began mixing pigment with oil and who achieved clarity, detail, color, richness, and more that the world had never seen in painting. It was nearly a century, well after the high Renaissance was over there, before oil painting became the practice in Italy. Van Eyck's successors, Rogier van der Weyden, Memling, Provost, Bosch, the Breughels, Durer, and others carried the tradition further, and much of their work is still here. That's mostly why we came to Brugge. We'll see the crowning masterpiece of the early northern era, van Eyck's Adoration of the Mystic Lamb, when we visit Ghent in a week.
Brugge's museums have their act together in many ways, not
least this delivery truck, itself worthy of study















Our first stop was the Hospital of St. Jan; for reasonably
healthy atheists, we seem to spend a lot of time in churches
and hospitals; oh well, this is a treasure chest, decorated
by Memling, the sufferings and martyrdom of St. Ursula
(and the 11,000 virgins who accompanied her)

















Virgin and Child, by an anonymous 14th century master; not
a master of anatomy, however















Upper floor of the main hall of the hospital, with vaulting
exposed















Memling's great altarpiece of the two Johns (baptist and
evangelist), done for the Hospital















Anything concerning any of the
evangelist Johns--scholars argue there were
at least three hands behind the works
attributed to him by the early Church--
is worthy of further examination; here he is,
receiving the Revelation






















Seven-headed aerial combat, just as we saw in Angers














Devotional diptych of Mother and Child and Maartin van
Nieuwenhoven, by Memling 















Up closer, with this very early mirror shot; the first, of course,
was a van Eyck, and generation before; mirror shots would 
become quite the thing in Flemish painting (and Spanish) in 
a couple more centuries...
















Another Memling triptych, that of (commissioned by) Adriaan
Reins















And now we move to the Groeningmuseum; a Last Judgment
by Jan Provost















Who apparently was taking lessons from Bosch














Speaking of whom, here is a Bosch Last Judgment; just like
in the Prado, the Bosch here draws crowds, and people like
us can spend very long periods of time looking at them




























Since any few square inches of these works
yield interesting insights...about what, we
are not sure...the late Medieval mind, the mind
of Hieronymus Bosch, trouble brewing in the
religious world of the time...still one cannot
help being impressed, even awed

























Memling's Moreel triptych (the donor)
















Rogier van der Weyden's "St. Luke Drawing
the Madonna"--we conjecture St. Luke is the
patron saint of artists (?)






















And here, for the skeptical, is Lancelot
Blondeel's "St. Luke Painting the Madonna"





















And perhaps this museum's most famous piece, van Eyck's
Madonna with Canon Joris van der Paele (again, the donor);
the lighting was terrible; this is a large, almost life-sized
painting; the color and detail are breath-taking














Sunday, June 2, 2013

Brugge

We drove on, reluctantly leaving France, to Brugge, a town we had visited in 1979, but of which we had no memories, save our hosts. We found our campground, Klein Strand in Jabbeke, a few miles outside Brugge, and next morning, despite considerable confusion, bused in to the old city. Our goals were to see some of the great art and the city and its mostly 17th century architecture. We are in Flemland now, as some call it, Belgium, a place of exceptional interest and beauty. And great beers. And lace and chocolate and waffles. And, above all, great frites.
No sooner than we walk to the bus stop in
Jabbeke where we camped than up pops
another bread vending machine; this time
imaginatively called a "MannaMatic"





















Photo selection is so difficult; we'll skip
Brugge's forgettable cathedral in order to
show this sleek, stainless-steel public
pissoir, very nearly affixed to the cathedral
wall; of course I did






















Street scene


















Ditto














Interesting iron-work














Apse of cathedral; or some other apse


















On the main drag en route to the bell tower
and main square



















About a quarter of the "beer wall," featuring all of Belgium's
thousand or so beers; they really are the best; Duvel best of
them all















Peeking into the Dali museum; every big city seems to have
one















On the main square; not Brussels' Grande Place; but pretty
impressive
















Indulging in the frites experience; this was the
petit serving, dinner for both of us; reminded
me of the old saw about how to tell Belgians
from French: the French have fries with their
bread; Belgians have bread with their fries






















Artsy-fartsy shot of the day: the customary
bronze model and the real thing,  Brugge's
bell tower




















More central square














On an adjoining square, just past the Kathe Wolhlfhart
shoppe; warning: Brugge is just a bit touristy















But that's forgivable when there are block after block after
block of these mostly 17th century beauties















Saturday, June 1, 2013

Vimy Ridge, 2013

We had visited a number of WWI sites and memorials on previous trips to France and Belgium. They are like Gettysburg, writ large. Very large. Unlike WWII, it was a war, perhaps the last great war, between armies, men in uniform. There were battles in WWI, I have read (Mons?), in which the British lost more men in uniform than they did in the whole of WWII. In the Second World War, most casualties were among non-combatants.

After a score or so of WWI cemeteries we decided to stop again at one of the many memorials. The Canadian memorial at Vimy Ridge is relatively unique in that the battlefield has been left as it was, or now is. There is an excellent visitor center and some hundreds of meters of trench and "subway" are open to tour. Electrified fences keep visitors on approved trails. There are un-detonated explosives all over the grounds, some still viable just a few years ago. Much of the warfare here was subterranean. An explosives specialist was killed in 1998, not by a detonation, but by the collapse of a tunnel.
En route, one of the many memorials that dot
the countryside



















Looking to what was left of the village of Vimy, 1916
Very able Canadian college students conduct tours; there
are displays and a superb video at the visitor center
A British mortar
Out in the trenches now, standing at a Canadian look-out
post
What the Canadian look-out posts looked like from the German
side
Trench-work on the German side; note their stone-work
observation post
The forest has come back mostly, but there are artillery
craters everywhere, some building-size; it was an artillery
war
Me in the German observation post; just happy to be
able to fit in
Much of France is so dedicated
Steps down to the "subway," the improved
subterranean route, sometimes going for
kilometers, for communication and supply




















NB
At the Memorial itself, on which ground thousands of
Canadians died; they took Vimy Ridge, 3,000 killed, 7,000
wounded; among many Canadian triumphs in WWI
The great Vimy Ridge Memorial

Friday, May 31, 2013

Into The Somme

Every village, town, and city in France has its war memorials, proudly maintained and honored. In eastern France, where much of the Great War was fought, the hundreds of cemeteries and memorials honor the dead, but also bear witness to the horror of war, and particularly that war.
A memorial in the cathedral at Noyon was
among the first that caught our attention



















Our route north from Amiens now traversed the shifting
lines of battle of the Sommes offensive, July-November, 1916;
1.2 million lives were lost in the offensive; the British lost
21,000 killed and 35,000 wounded just the first day; the line
moved a couple of miles, which the Germans quickly gained
back in 1918


















We stopped at one of the many British cemeteries along
our route; not a large one, really















Perhaps a third of the markers bore this
inscription...