Getting started with the collection:
No image available
Art after iconoclasm: painting in the Netherlands between 1566 and 1585
Abstract
Rather than as a destructive moment in history, the Iconoclasm of 1566 in the Netherlands was the catalyst for a re-evaluation of (religious) art in the Low Countries. It forced painters to question the very nature of the artistic tradition they grew up in. Is it merely a coincidence that the art markets changed so swiftly after the Fall of Antwerp, that art theory in the Low Countries originated in the wake of Iconoclasm (De Heere, Lampsonius, ...), or that painting in the second half of the sixteenth century saw the impetus of new styles, genres, specialisations (Aertsen, De Beuckelaer, ...)? Iconoclasm forced people to think about art. The generation of painters active in the two decades between the 'Beeldenstorm' and the fall of Antwerp did this by questioning the decorum of the work of their famous predecessors.
Contributors
Publisher
Publication
Turnhout: Brepols, c2012
Is about
Subject
Period
1566-1585
Type
Language
Classification
ISBN
- 9782503545967
- 2503545963
Persistent URL
To refer to this object, please use the following persistent URL: