New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art. 1994. — 246 p. — ISBN-0-87099-694-0This study is an important new account of the life and work of the Flemish master Petrus Christus. It is the first volume to focus specifically on the physical characteristics of his works as criteria for judging attribution, dating, and the extent to which he was indebted to Jan van Eyck and other artists for the development of his technique and style. The author's aim is to examine how certain works were made in order to solve some rather traditional questions of connoisseurship.Recent technical and archival investigations, the result of which are published here together for the first time, form the basis of a sophisticated reassessment of Christus. His relationship with van Eyck's workshop is explored. There is a careful description of his working methods, including his use of underdrawings and his exploration perspective. The results of dendrochronological analyses of many of his panels are also given.As important as this technical and art-historical evaluation is the social and biographical background that is provided. Christus is placed in the context of fifteenth-century Bruges, a wealthy and powerful city under the rule of the dukes of Burgundy. Its status as a ducal seat fostered a lively cultural life, and patrons for artistic undertakings were also found in the relatively large number of well-to-do citizens and foreign merchants who lived there. The economic, social, and political forces that affected Bruges are described, as is their impact on the city's community of artists, which included Jan van Eyck and Hans Memling. Throughout, the authors draw on archival documents relating to citizenship, public celebrations, contracts, and confraternities to describe artistic activity in Bruges and to construct Christus's cultural biography.This publication accompanies the most important exhibition of early Netherlandish paintings in the United States in more than three decades. Each of the twenty-seven works is discussed in an extended entry with a complete provenance, and a selected bibliography is provided.The authors of this major study of Petrus Christus are Maryan W. Ainsworth, Senior Research Fellow, Department of Paintings Conservation, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Maximiliaan P. J. Martens, Associate Professor, History of Medieval Art, University of Groningen.
Author(s): Maryan W. Ainsworth, Maximiliaan P. J. Martens
Publisher: The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Year: 1994
Language: English
Pages: 232
Tags: Early Netherlandish art, Northern Renaissance, Petrus Christus, Bruges
Frontispiece
Contents
Director’s foreword
Acknowledgments
Petrus Christus. Renaissance master of Bruges
Bruges during Petrus Christus’ lifetime
Petrus Christus: A cultural biography
The art of Petrus Christus
Catalogue
1. Workshop of Jan van Eyck: Saint Jerome in his study
2. Jan van Eyck and workshop: Virgin and Child with Saints Barbara and Elizabeth and Jan Vos
3. Attributed to Petrus Christus: Saint John the Baptist in a landscape
4. Head of Christ (Ecce Homo)
5. Portrait of a Carthusian
6. Saint Eligius
7. Virgin and Child with Saint Barbara and Jan Vos (Exeter Madonna)
8. Lamentation
9. Christ as the Man of Sorrows
10. Attributed to Petrus Christus: Annunciation
11. Virgin and Child in an archway
12. Portrait of a male donor. Portrait of a female donor
13. Madonna enthroned with Saints Jerome and Francis
14. Virgin and Child enthroned on a porch
15. Death of the Virgin
16. Portrait of a man
17. Nativity
18. Madonna of the dry tree
19. Portrait of a lady
20. Holy Family in a domestic interior
21. Trinity
22. Madonna and Child with a donor (copy of the Maelbeke Madonna)
23. Portrait of a young woman
24. Portrait of a man with a falcon
25. Attributed to Petrus Christus: Portrait of a woman
26. Follower of Petrus Christus: Two female heads
Appendix 1. Archival documents and literary sources
Appendix 2. Dendrochronological analysis of panels attributed to Petrus Christus
Selected bibliography
Index
Photograph credits