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'Truly bright and memorable': Jan de Beer's Renaissance altarpieces
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Abstract
Accompanying an exhibition at the Barber Institute of Fine Arts - only the second exhibition ever devoted to the artist - this noteworthy publication considers De Beer's work and career, working methods, and traces the history of De Beer's paintings in British collections.0The Antwerp painter Jan de Beer (c.1475-1527/28) was highly esteemed in his lifetime and still famous a couple of generations after his death, but then fell into oblivion until the early twentieth century. Only recently have his achievements been fully recognized and documented. The artist's known oeuvre consists of forty works, mainly devotional paintings and triptychs but also a dozen drawings and a stained glass window, after a lost design. De Beer's stylish and elegant art appealed to patrons and collectors, churches abroad, and copyists. His work is typically associated with that of the Antwerp Mannerists, a prominent group of mostly anonymous painters active in the city during his lifetime.00Exhibition: The Barber Institute of Fine Arts, Birmingham, UK (25.10.2019-19.01.2020)
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Publication
London: Paul Holberton Publishing, 2019
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ISBN
- 1911300725
- 9781911300724
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Notes
Published to accompany the exhibition held at the Barber Institute of Fine Arts.
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