|
Limbourg (also spelled
Limburg), three Flemish brothers who were the most famous of all late
Gothic illuminators. They synthesized the achievements of contemporary
illuminators into a style characterized by subtlety of line, painstaking
technique, and minute rendering of detail. The sons of a sculptor, Arnold
van Limbourg, they were also the nephews of
Jean Malouel, court painter
to the Duke of Burgundy, and are sometimes known by the name "Malouel."
The brothers worked together, and although the most celebrated appears
to have been the eldest brother, Pol, it is difficult to distinguish their
individual styles.
About 1400 the
brothers were apprenticed to a goldsmith in Paris, and between 1402 and
1404 Pol and Jehanequin were working for the Duke of Burgundy in Paris,
possibly on the illustration of a Bible moralisée now in the Bibliothèque
Nationale, Paris. Some time after Burgundy's death in 1404, they entered
the service of his brother, the Duke de Berry, and it was for him that
their most lavishly illustrated books of hours (the popular form of private
prayer book of the period) were produced. The Belles Heures (or Les Heures
d'Ailly; now in The Cloisters, New York) show the influence of the Italianate
elements of the contemporary French artist Jacquemart de Hesdin's illuminations.
The Très Riches
Heures du duc de Berry (Musée Condé, Chantilly, Fr.), considered their
greatest work, is one of the landmarks of the art of book illumination
and ranks among the supreme examples of the International Gothic style.
It is essentially a court style, elegant and sophisticated, combining
naturalism of detail with overall decorative effect. An awareness of the
most progressive international currents of the time, particularly those
deriving from Italy, suggests that at least one of the brothers visited
there. The Très Riches Heures was left unfinished in 1416 but was completed
about 1485 by Jean Colombe.
The Limbourg
brothers were among the first to render specific landscape scenes with
accuracy. Their art did much to determine the course that Early Netherlandish
art was to take during the 15th century.
Works
|