Friday, June 7, 2013

Antwerp Cathedral Art

Antwerp's Cathedral is quite old and quite large, nave and three aisles on each side, although the outside aisles seem more like separate chapels. It's not terrifically high, nor interesting, architecturally. It's had a long and difficult history, with much remodeling. Work continues and it's going to be beautiful when finished.
Nave view


















In one of the aisle/chapels; I was commenting
that this chancel would really be happier in
Spain, and Vicki reminded me that, in this age,
Antwerp was in Spain





















Priestly vestment version of the ever popular
Tree of Jesse



















Lots of colorful but not very old glass


















Nice angelic painter...


















But what most visitors come to see here are the colossal
Rubens altar pieces














Thus














And thus














Detail of which, illustrating the principle that blondes have
more fun















Main chancel, showing the position of


















Rubens' Assumption of Mary


















The chapel in which Rubens' Resurrection of Jesus resides
is being renovated; hence this copy















The beautiful oak pulpit by Michiel van der
Voort, supported by the Four Continents



















Rockox House

One of the finest of small museums anywhere is the House of Nicholaas Rockox, a 17th century Antwerp patrician and collector. These days it is enhanced by many works from the nearby Royal Museum of Fine Arts, which is being renovated. We spent most of the day here before moving on to the cathedral. Again, the emphasis is local and 14th-17th centuries, which suited us fine. The paintings I'm not posting are nearly as good or famous as the one's I am posting.
Jean Fouquet's mid-15th century Madonna with cherubim
and seraphim; the model was said to be Agnes Sorel,
Charles VII's mistress; condemned as blasphemous by
many, the Surrealists made the "fashion doll" one of their
icons


















Antonella da Messina's Calvary; an Italian
painter in Flanders; done between 1457-1460



















Rogier van der Weyden's Portrait of 
Philippe de Croy



















Festival of the Archers, by the Master of
Frankfurt; he and his wife are in the painting,
lower right, standing above the fence,
recognizable from





















The Painter and His Wife; so why did the
Master of Frankfurt paint the huge fly on his
wife's head?




















Peter the Younger Brueghel's copy of the Elder's famous
Proverbs, which we saw--studied--in Berlin














Detail worth pondering...















Jan Massijs' Judith


















Marinus van Reymerswale The Tax Collector;
nobody likes tax collectors; they always get
funny hats




















Much going on in Antoine Steenwinkel's
Vanitas Portrait of the Painter



















Joos van Cleve's Jesus and John (that's what
the note said)



















Rubens' Venus Frigida, illustrating Terence's line that
without Ceres and Bacchus, Venus would freeze; hunger
and thirst put a chill on love...














Franz Francken's An Art Gallery; I like the gallery shots,
but none of the biggies ever painted them














The Five Senses, by Gonzales Coques (his self-portrait is
the one behind the vase, the sense of taste)














Rubens' Prodigal Son; he never sold this one, kept it for
himself until he died














One wall of one room in this museum; in the center is
Rubens' Memorial Triptych for Nicholas Rockox; other
masterworks all over the place...














Thursday, June 6, 2013

Antwerp 2

More of Antwerp...
On one of our walks we ducked into this old
alley--sort of like the traboules in Lyons--and were
rewarded with a number of old views




















Thus


















And thus














Some 1,000 Madonna and Child sculptures
adorn old Antwerp; sculptors donated such
works hoping to get noticed; so we read




















Famous well and iron work


















Antwerp performing arts theater; we had lunch one day
nearby















They do fries in Antwerp too


















Durer lived for a time in Antwerp, celebrated
by assorted plaques, paintings, and so forth



















But Antwerp belongs to the guy who helped design this
church, and whom, I would argue, is the greatest of all
painters, at least as measured by square meters of
acknowledged masterpieces 

















Rubens; we'll see his House, his paintings in
the Cathedral and in two of Antwerp's
museums; we've seen his work in most of the
museums we have visited in Europe; we are
not Rubens fans; but you have to pay
homage when in Antwerp

Antwerp 1

After three pleasant days in Amsterdam, we drove back to Antwerp, a city we'd never visited before. The traffic jams were gone, and we found our way easily to the municipal camper stop at Antwerp Expo, about a 10 minute bus ride to the historic district. Antwerp has some great museums which were our primary goals. But first some pix of this beautiful city from our various walks...
In the main square, the cathedral tower above, from the next
big square over















Another beautiful old city square














As elsewhere in this part of the world, guild houses...














Ditto














Beautiful city














Famous fountain


















Attempted artsy-fartsy shot of guild house and cathedral
tower; atop the guild house is a sailing ship, emblematic,
for me, anyway, of Antwerp's historic (and contemporary)
importance as one of the world's great ports

















Antwerp's cathedral; in another post, we'll
go inside, mostly for the art



















Judgment typanum over the main west door; nice Jaws of Hell
on the right side













Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Van Gogh Museum

So on a rainy Wednesday afternoon we finally made good on a pledge made in Arles, in 2010, and again in 2011 and again in 2012, that we would visit Amsterdam's Van Gogh Museum. We had already seen it in 1979, or 1989, but, hey, things change, and in particular, our appreciation of such things certainly has changed. It is a one-person museum, of course, although there are many works by other famous artists who influenced Van Gogh. But as a one-person museum, it permits insight into the artist and to the forces to which he responded, into his development as an artist, that are not available in the usual stray collection of his works. I am not a Van Gogh fan, personally, but I thought this museum did a wonderful job in displaying such things.
Didn't we see this guy in Paris? Musee D'Orsay?



















The theme of the exhibition currently is "Van Gogh at work," and
these really are his palette and paint tubes from Paris















I won't try to do this in order nor weave a
Van Gogh narrative; here's a famous painting
of a chair, later 1880s, I'd say




















His first big gig was with the Amsterdam Cancer Society
(nyuk, nyuk, nyuk)



















Vicki in a Van Gogh chair in the museum bookstore














Extremely famous bedroom scene














Self-portrait with straw hat


















He did some very few "religious" pieces: this is Jesus' raising Lazarus; Jesus
apparently is the one with the big boobs; Van Gogh went back to gardens and
wheat fields after this
















Thus; the garden at the mental hospital where he lived for a while















Wheat field with storm approaching; prophetic?














Interlude: rainy day shot of the Rijksmuseum from the Van Gogh Museum















Toulouse-Lautrec's portrait of Van Gogh


















Gaugin's portrait of Van Gogh














At last, in 1890, he walked out into a wheat field and shot himself, still a relatively
young man, and seeming finally to have found his unique vision...