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Master of Flémalle
Netherlandish painter named after three paintings in the Städelsches
Kunstinstitut in Frankfurt that were wrongly supposed to have come from
Flémalle, near Liège. There is a strong consensus of scholarly opinion
that he is to be identified with Robert Campin (active 1406-44), who was
the leading painter of his day in Tournai but none of whose documented
pictures survive. The identification depends on the similarity between
the Master of Flémalle's paintings and those of
Jacques Daret and
Rogier
van der Weyden, for Daret was Campin's pupil and Rogier almost certainly
was. The hypothesis that the Master of Flémalle's paintings are early
works by Rogier now has few adherents.
While there
is still doubt about the Master of Flémalle's identity, there is no argument
about his achievement, for he made a radical break with the elegant International
Gothic style and ranks with van Eyck as one of the founders of the Netherlandish
school of painting. None of the paintings given to him is dated -- with
the exception of the wings of the Werl altarpiece of 1438 in the Prado,
a doubtful attribution - but it seems likely that his earliest works antedate
any surviving picture by van Eyck. The earliest of all is generally thought
to be The Entombment (Courtauld Institute, London) of about 1410/20. This
still has the decorative gold background of medieval tradition, but the
influence of Claus Sluter is clear in the sculptural solidity and dramatic
force of the figures.
The most famous work
associated with the Master of Flémalle is the Mérode Altarpiece (Metropolitan
Museum, New York), and he is indeed sometimes referred to as the Master
of Mérode. However, the attribution of this painting has also been questioned.
Among the other works generally accepted as his are The Marriage of the
Virgin (Prado, Madrid), The Nativity (Musee des Beaux-Arts, Dijon), and
The Virgin and Child before a Firescreen (National Gallery, London), which
shows the homely detail and down-to-earth naturalism associated with the
artist (the firescreen behind the Virgin's head forms a substitute for a
halo). The National Gallery also has three portraits associated with the
Master of Flémalle. In spite of the many problems that still surround him,
he emerges as a very powerful and important artistic personality.
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