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Bruegel posters at barewalls.com |
Pieter Bruegel the Elder (1520?-1569), the great
Flemish painter, was enormously popular during his lifetime due not so much to his
paintings as to the wide dissemination of engravings based on his drawings. Through
reproductions, Breugel's works have broad public popularity to this day, attesting to the
universal appeal of his imaginative and superbly rendered images and, as well, the
humanistic outlook that they reflect.
Information about Bruegel's life and work is spotty, creating an
unending challenge for art scholars, especially in determining which works can be
accurately attributed to him and which were by contemporaries, or were copies or
outright forgeries. Over recent years, many works previously thought to be his have been
found to be of questionable attribution and occasionally works previously thought to be by
someone else have become accepted as his.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art's current exhibition, organized with the
Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam and six years in preparation, brings together
an astounding 50 of the 61 extant drawings. There are also some 60 prints, most exhibited
side-by-side with the Brueghel drawing from which the engraving was created. An
interesting addendum is a small group of prints created after Brueghel's death in which
can be seen the deviations from those made during his lifetime, when he worked closely
with the engravers to be sure their work was in line with his intentions.
The comprehensiveness and the scholarly rigor of the exhibit will make it
essential viewing for art professionals and a stimulus to further study; at the same time
the brilliance and accessibility of the drawings and prints will appeal to a broad public.
(Unfortunately the exhibit will not travel beyond New York. Lenders, understandably, do
not like these works to be away from their collections for extended periods.)
Organized in roughly chronological order, the exhibit starts with a
group of landscape drawings, many dating to 1552-1553 when Bruegel visited Italy where he
was influenced in particular by the works of Titian. The landscapes, more often than not,
have the vertical of a large tree in the foreground, deep perspective carrying the eye to
distant vistas, and small figures of people and animals. The scale suggests the immensity
of nature and the insignificance of man, a mere speck against the background. Even the
castles dotting the hillsides seem dwarfed. Within that context there are also rivers with
boats and roads with travelers, suggesting humanity's journey through the vastness of the
earth.
Most of the drawings are in pen and brown ink with which a range of
lines, curves, dots and hatchings are used, the seemingly simple strokes together
rendering the subject matter with masterful economy and an uncanny sense of immediacy. A
unique standout is a "Wooded Landscape with a Distant View toward the Sea," in
which the brown ink is complemented by brown wash, white gouache, and black chalk--all on
blue paper, a startlingly different effect.
In the large selection of drawings as designs for prints are many
surrealistic images, clearly influenced by Bosch. Indeed, Bruegel has been called the
"second Bosch." "Big Fish Eat Little Fish," a widely known image, is
one of many that illustrate proverbs. Not only the fish are eating; the men are using
knives to cut the fish open. Only the fish with wings, flying in the sky, seems to have
escaped the cycle.
"The Ass at School" has a satirical slant, showing both the
animal (reading a sheet of music) and the exposed buttocks of a student about to be
whipped, just one of the unruly crowd of children. Just how much learning is going on? The
inscription: "If you send a stupid ass to Paris, if it is an ass here, it will not be
a horse there.
A series of prints covers the seven deadly sins and the virtues as
well. The sins delve deeply into Bosch territory, with multiple figures, animals, and
grotesques graphically illustrating each. "Greed" is seated among bags of money.
a huge purse, and a coffer, counting the wealth, in the midst of revelers, devilish
figures, a frog prominently placed in front center. "Pride" is a woman admiring
herself in a mirror, a peacock in full display beside her. "Anger" emerges from
an army tent, sword in one hand, a torch in the other, together with armed soldiers
attacking innocent and defenseless people.
On the virtuous side, "Justice" is as expected, blindfolded
and holding her sword and scales, the punishment of wrongdoers illustrated on all sides.
"Temperance," on the other hand, surprises with a clock on her head and a bit in
her mouth.
A perennial favorite is the drawing "The Painter and the
Connoisseur," in which the painter (perhaps a self-portrait?) seems interrupted by
the potential buyer, who has his hand on his purse and examines the work in progress
through his spectacles. It's a symbiotic relationship fraught with complications, that
between art and commerce--one that hasn't changed noticeably since Breugel's drawing more
than four centuries ago.
September 25, 2001 - Arthur Lazere