SHORTS, NOVELS, AND OTHER THINGS

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SHORTS, NOVELS, AND OTHER THINGS

J = Jheronimus van Aken or Hieronymus Bosch

Left click on the images to enjoy the beauty!

Self Portrait
Self Portrait

Hieronymus Bosch was born Jheronimus (the Latin form of the name Jerome), and he signed a number of his paintings as Jheronimus Bosch, Bosch being a derivative of the town where he was born and spent most of this life. Bosch is a revolutionary of the early Northern Renaissance; his importance is not only the uniqueness of his work, but also his influence on Pieter Breugel the Elder, a famous Flemish painter during the High Renaissance, known for his landscapes and

Triumph of Death, Pieter Breugel the Elder
Triumph of Death, Pieter Breugel the Elder

peasant scenes.

From his work, Bosch appears to have been a pessimist and stern moralist. His paintings are sermons, and he chose symbols to represent the temptation of man by earthly evils.  Recent scholarship portrays Bosch as one of the first artists to represent abstract concepts in his paintings.

There is little information on Bosch’s early life, other than the fact that he was the son and grandson of accomplished painters.  Even his date of birth has had to be estimated from his self portrait.  The few other personal facts: sometime between 1479 and 1481, Bosch married, and in 1488 he joined the highly respected Brotherhood of Our Lady, an arch-conservative religious group, which mentions him in its official records until the year of his death.

Ecce Homo
Ecce Homo

Only 35 to 40 paintings are attributed to Bosch, but only seven are signed and none are dated. However, it is easy to trace the evolution of his style and mastery of painting. For example, his early work shows some awkwardness and his subjects are somewhat limited scope, such

Cutting the Stone
Cutting the Stone

as Ecco Homo and Cutting the Stone.   But even in these early paintings, Bosch had begun to depict the vulnerability of men to lust, heresy, and obscenity.

The triptych of the Temptation of St Anthony, painted in 1490, heralds the maturation of Bosch’s artistic abilities.  The brushstrokes are sharper, his figures are graceful, there is slight  movement, and his colors are more subtle.  Most exceptionally, there is an eruption of hellish fantasy, with grotesque demons and a bizarre, fantastic backgrounds to illustrate the temptation of the devil.

The Temptation of St. Anthony, 1490
The Temptation of St. Anthony, 1490

The Garden of Earthly Delights painted sometime between 1490 and 1510, is Bosch at his best.  Painted in oil on oak, it shows the creation of woman, her temptation by the devil, and the fall. It contains unsettling images of sensuality; hordes of nudes, giant birds, and horses frolic in an otherworldly landscape. In no other work does Bosch achieve the complexity of imagery and meaning.   Books and theses have been devoted to the decoding and understanding of his imagery!

The Garden of Earthly Delights, 1503
The Garden of Earthly Delights, 1503
Christ Crowned with Thorns, 1510
Christ Crowned with Thorns, 1510

In Bosch’s late works, he painted dense groups of half figures or just heads, pushing up against the plane of the picture.  In the Crowning with Thorns and the Carrying of the Cross, for example, you are so near to the image, you are almost participating.

Christ Carrying the Cross
Christ Carrying the Cross
Saint John the Evangelist at Patmos
Saint John the Evangelist at Patmos

During this period, Bosch also painted his most peaceful and untroubled works, for example St. John the Evangelist in Patmos and St. John the Baptist in the Desert.

The accounts of the Brotherhood of Our Lady record Bosch’s death in 1516, with a funeral mass in his memory on 9 August of that year.

Saint John the Baptist in the Desert
Saint John the Baptist in the Desert
The Conjuror, 1505
The Conjuror, 1505

My favorite work? The Conjuror.  It was supposedly painted in 1505, but looks to be from his early period.  How many times have you yourself seen something like this?

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13 thoughts on “J = Jheronimus van Aken or Hieronymus Bosch”

  1. I know something of HB – eg his scenes from Hell, but now I know more – I’m not sure I knew he was a 16th C painter. Thank you for this Noelle .. and will check out your earlier posts. And yes, I do get a sense of participation when viewing his Art.
    Garden of Eden Blog

  2. This name I’m am definitely familiar with (Hieronymus, that is). Great to see his art here. What a treat. Look at the way he painted the faces in the Christ Carrying the Cross piece, that says a lot.

  3. I remember painting something similar to The Temptation of St. Anthony in a fit of teenage angst (though obviously nowhere near as talented). Maybe I saw a picture of it that imprinted itself on me; a lot of the themes look familiar.

  4. A great artist. Love being able to click on and see the pictures bigger with greater detail. You can certainly see that he would have influenced Breugel the elder. A book I enjoyed was Michael Frayn’s Headlong. Fiction but a lot of detail on Breugel. The conjurer reminds me of my time in Spain where I got caught out by this very game. It really makes you think how far back some of our activities go.

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