Bruegel
Sandra Forty
- 96 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Bruegel
Sandra Forty
About This Book
The Flemish artist Pieter Bruegelâsometimes called Peasant Bruegelâwas the first great artist to paint scenes of ordinary peasant life and show the common man and woman as they went about their daily tasks and amusements. He is credited with bringing a humanizing spirit to paintingâ something that was lacking in medieval works and entirely absent from contemporary Renaissance paintings. His compositions are full of rich details and reward close examination; in fact, they are used by cultural historians as source material for old Flemish customs, styles of dress, cultivation, and many other aspects of 16th-century everyday life. In 1563 Bruegel painted one of his most famous works, The Tower of Babel, for the first time; during his lifetime, he painted the subject three times. Called a figurative allegory, The Tower of Babel tells a story from the Old Testament, Genesis 11: 1â9. The theme is the futility of human ambition and commercial greed. Other subjects, many produced as prints, included the seven deadly sins (or vices) and the seven virtues. At his death in 1569, his old friend Ortelius described him as "the most perfect painter of his time." His two sons Pieter and Jan, also accomplished artists, followed in their father's footsteps, firmly establishing the Brueg(h)el name in the art history books.