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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69306 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69306)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The brothers Van Eyck, by P. G. Konody
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The brothers Van Eyck
-
-Author: P. G. Konody
-
-Release Date: November 6, 2022 [eBook #69306]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Al Haines
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BROTHERS VAN EYCK ***
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Frontispiece: JAN ARNOLFINI AND JEANNE DE CHENANY. BY JAN VAN EYCK.]
-
-
-
- Bell's Miniature Series of Painters
-
-
- THE BROTHERS
- VAN EYCK
-
- BY
-
- P. G. KONODY
-
-
-
- LONDON
- GEORGE BELL & SONS
- 1907
-
-
-
-
-TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
-
-THE TIMES OF THE BROTHERS VAN EYCK
-
-HUBERT VAN EYCK
-
-JAN VAN EYCK
-
-THE INVENTION OF OIL-PAINTING
-
-THE ART OF THE VAN EYCKS
-
-COLLABORATION OF THE BROTHERS
-
-OUR ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-LIST OF WORKS, CATALOGUED ACCORDING TO LOCALITY
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
-JAN ARNOLFINI AND JEANNE DE CHENANY
- (_National Gallery_) - - - _Frontispiece_
- By Jan van Eyck.
-
-THE ADORATION OF THE LAMB (_Cathedral of St. Bavo, Ghent_)
- By Hubert and Jan van Eyck.
-
-THE ENTHRONEMENT OF THOMAS À BECKET (_Chatsworth_)
- By Jan van Eyck.
-
-THE MAN WITH THE PINKS (_Berlin Museum_)
- By Jan van Eyck.
-
-ST. BARBARA (_Antwerp Museum_)
- By Jan van Eyck.
-
-THE JUST JUDGES, AND CHRIST'S WARRIORS (_Berlin Museum_)
- By Hubert and Jan van Eyck.
-
-PORTRAIT OF TIMOTHY (_National Gallery_)
- By Jan van Eyck.
-
-THE VAN DER PAELE ALTAR-PIECE (_Bruges Museum_)
- By Jan van Eyck.
-
-
-
-
-{1}
-
-THE TIMES OF THE BROTHERS VAN EYCK
-
-The unusual activity which during the latter half of the fourteenth
-and the first half of the fifteenth centuries throbbed throughout the
-whole of the Netherlands forms one of the most interesting and
-surprising studies of national progress that history has furnished.
-
-Geographically and politically, in her arts and in her industries,
-the country was affected by changes both radical and lasting. Some
-years before the period which embraces the life of the subjects of
-this biographical sketch, the German Ocean had invaded the northern
-territory of the Netherlands, and had disorganised a Parliament and
-divided a people. At the beginning of the thirteenth century over
-the whole of that low-lying and marshy tract between Kampen on the
-east and Amsterdam to westward, and southward to within sight of
-Nieukerk, the North Sea swept in upon the {2} inland lake of Flevo,
-swallowing thousands of hamlets, villages, and towns suddenly and
-completely. Until this time there had been but one Friesland,
-including Holland, divided only by the Vlie, a small stream hardly to
-be counted a river. Now East Friesland and West Friesland were
-divided by this vast stretch of water, the stormy and dangerous
-Zuyderzee, and it became impossible for Holland to send her
-representatives to the general assemblies at Aurich. West Friesland
-was absorbed by Holland, and East Friesland became a self-governing
-State, and remained such until the power of Charles V. was
-established. Thus politically as well as geographically was the
-country disrupted by the forces of Nature.
-
-To trace the rise of the Netherlands as a European Power from a more
-remote period than the beginning of the fourteenth century would be
-beyond the range of this sketch; but for the purpose of showing the
-general advance of the country's interests a brief summary of the
-events culminating in the wellnigh despotic power of the House of
-Burgundy may refresh the reader's mind, as they affect the
-constitution of the nation, and may serve to point cause {3} and
-effect in the increasing prosperity of the country and in the
-resulting advance of art; for just as the political influence of the
-Burgundian Princes spread from their hereditary provinces first over
-Flanders and Brabant--over that part of the Netherlands which is now
-known as Belgium--and finally over the Dutch provinces, so the
-current of art swept from Burgundy to Flanders and thence to Holland.
-
-At the beginning of the fourteenth century Holland was ruled by the
-House of Avennes, Counts of Hainault. Holland having previous to the
-accession of the Avennes annexed Zeeland, the three provinces may
-almost be regarded as the nucleus of the Dutch power. William IV.,
-last of the Hainault line, died childless in 1355. His death was the
-signal for the outbreak of a long and spasmodic series of civil
-disturbances between the nobles and the cities and municipalities.
-These parties, known by the titles of the Hooks and the Kabblejaus
-(codfish), continued their intermittent strife throughout the
-succeeding 150 years. In the meantime William IV. was succeeded by
-William of Bavaria. Then followed his brother Albert, who was in
-turn succeeded by his son William VI. At the death of the latter {4}
-the reins of government were left in the uncertain hands of his young
-daughter, Jacqueline, a girl of seventeen. Jacqueline, it appears,
-led anything but a happy life. Her cousin, Philip the Good, Duke of
-Burgundy, for thirteen years plundered and robbed her, and at her
-death in 1437 he had already dispossessed her of her lands and
-reduced her from the position of Sovereign to that of Lady Forester
-in her own provinces, whilst for himself he had laid the foundation
-of that Greater Netherlands which by conquest and annexation he
-proceeded to extend.
-
-Having acquired the principal Netherlands and inherited the two
-Burgundies and the counties of Flanders and Artois, he had purchased
-the county of Namur, usurped the duchy of Brabant, and annexed the
-barony of Mechlin. A few years later he acquired also the duchy of
-Luxembourg.
-
-Philip was now the ruler of what may be termed a kingdom of several
-peoples, who, though in a measure distinct, were of similar
-temperament and character, and who may be counted now as one. Never
-has conqueror been in a happier position when faced with the problem
-of welding together his conquests. {5} For Philip ruled those whose
-interests were similar, and whose characteristics were almost
-identical--a people born of the sea, strong and fearless, who had
-lived by strife with their fellows and by strife with Nature; a
-people born to toil and to hardship, whose battle for life had been
-with Nature herself--a race which for centuries had fought with swamp
-and water year in, year out, conquering a mile of morass or patch of
-barren furze, striving for the soil to live upon, working not for
-gold, but for life. This nation had now become a power of natural
-strength and of dominating physique, virile and live and expansive,
-whose sons, with brooms at their mastheads, should later sweep the
-seas from whose destructive embrace she had succeeded in wresting
-herself.
-
-Under the rule of the Burgundian the prosperity of the Netherlands
-rapidly increased. In Holland and in Flanders, in Brabant and in the
-other leading provinces, industry and wealth, agriculture, commerce,
-and manufactures, were ever augmenting. While Philip, in the zenith
-of his power, flushed with the passion and success of territorial
-acquisition, busied himself with the glorification of his sovereignty
-by founding at Bruges, amid a {6} scene of indescribable splendour,
-the Order of the Golden Fleece, "to the honour of God, of the Blessed
-Virgin, and of the holy Andrew," a principle more potent than even
-territorial power was evolving. For in Haarlem an undistinguished
-sexton wrestled with the intricacies of the printing-press. Lorenz
-Coster was printing his book of the Dutch language. The question as
-to the time and place of the invention of printing will probably
-never be settled to the satisfaction of Holland and Germany; but the
-men of Haarlem still claim upon very sound and substantial evidence
-that between 1423 and 1440 their citizen was the first to employ
-movable type, which is generally considered the invention of printing
-proper, as distinguished from the more ancient block-printing.
-
-Whatever objection may be legitimately raised to the application of
-the title "The Good" to a ruler of Philip's character, this
-Burgundian had many of the qualities that go to the making of a
-successful monarch. His military talents were considerable; his
-political methods, though despotic, were practicable. Though he
-taxed the wealth of his country, he protected and encouraged the
-commerce and {7} manufactures of Holland and Flanders, their arts and
-crafts, science and literature. He founded at Bruges the famous
-Burgundian Library. He remodelled, and to some extent endowed, the
-University of Louvain. His munificence and princely generosity
-attracted to his Court at Bruges men of letters like Oliver de la
-Marche and Philippe de Commines, and famous painters like Jan van
-Eyck, and perhaps, though we lack documentary evidence, his elder
-brother Hubert, who gave, perhaps, more to the art of painting than
-even did Coster to the art of printing, or Philip himself to the
-sciences of statesmanship and war.
-
-The most salient points in the life and work of these two brothers,
-who close the period of stiff Gothic medievalism and stand on the
-threshold of modern art, and whose improvements in the technical
-methods of their art opened up to their successors unthought-of
-possibilities, are shrouded in deep mystery, and the most recent
-research to which a number of thoroughly competent scientific experts
-have devoted themselves, whilst producing many ingenious theories and
-deductions, has, in a certain sense, added to the confusion by
-throwing doubt upon the authenticity of documents {8} and
-inscriptions which had formerly passed undisputed, and formed the
-basis of the unstable edifice that had been erected around the vague
-fame of the brothers Van Eyck. This uncertainty begins with the
-parentage and the place and date of birth of the two masters, and
-extends to the two supreme achievements to which they owe their
-fame--the reputed invention of oil-painting, which was variously
-ascribed to Hubert and Jan, then denied to both of them, and,
-finally, given back to Hubert in the form of an improvement on the
-methods of oil-painting practised during the period; and the
-much-quoted inscription on the famous Ghent altar-piece, _The
-Adoration of the Lamb_, which has been, and must remain, the
-starting-point for all research in this matter, even though the late
-Henri Bouchot, Keeper of the Print Cabinet of the Bibliothèque
-Nationale, suggests that this inscription may have been added when
-the picture was restored in the middle of the sixteenth century. At
-every turn we are faced by similar doubts and contradictions,
-especially in the case of Hubert, about whose life and doings we have
-so little documentary evidence that we have to fall back entirely
-upon conjecture and deduction.
-
-[Illustration: THE ADORATION OF THE LAMB. BY HUBERT AND JAN VAN
-EYCK.]
-
-
-
-
-{9}
-
-HUBERT VAN EYCK
-
-If Joes van Eyck and Margaret van den Huntfanghe, who are entered in
-the register of the Ghent Guild of Painters for 1391, are the parents
-of the two masters who have made the name of Van Eyck immortal, we
-should have proof of their descent from artistic stock, which may be
-taken for granted in view of the fact that not only Hubert and Jan,
-but also a third brother, Lambert, and a sister, Margaret, devoted
-themselves to the art of painting, though Lambert--if he really be
-responsible for the pictures which stand to his credit--was a man of
-but mediocre talent; whilst we have no evidence of the activity of
-Margaret, who was most probably a miniaturist or illuminator.
-
-It is believed that Hubert (or Huybrecht) van Eyck was born at
-Maaseyck, or perhaps at the village of Eyck near that town, between
-1366 and 1370, and that he received his artistic training either at
-Cologne or at Maastricht; but the first definite mention we have of
-him {10} is in Ghent, where he eventually settled, and where, in
-1424, the archives record that he was paid certain sums for drawings.
-Though Mr. Weale and other authorities hold the view that, before
-settling in Ghent, Hubert must have travelled to the South of Europe,
-there is absolutely no evidence to this effect. The paintings of the
-two brothers certainly contain details which reveal intimate
-acquaintance with Southern vegetation and mountain formation; but, as
-will be seen later, Mr. Alfred Marks has fairly well established the
-fact that the younger brother, Jan, must be held responsible for such
-paintings or portions of paintings as prove the knowledge of Nature
-in the South of Europe.
-
-The name of Hubert van Eyck occurs in two other documents, quoted by
-Edmond de Busscher in his "Recherches sur les Peintres Gantois," but
-the authenticity of both these entries has lately been questioned.
-The first of them, which is proved to be a forgery, records the
-admission of Hubert and of his sister, Margaret, into the
-Confraternity of Our Lady of the Rays at Ghent in 1419; the other the
-affiliation of Hubert and Jan, in 1421, to the Corporation of
-Painters and Sculptors of Ghent. {11} According to the wording of
-the latter entry, it may be gathered that the election of the two
-masters was so enthusiastic and unanimous that the Corporation
-dispensed with the conditions and formalities usual on the admission
-of free masters to the guild. This unusual affiliation, of which the
-_Livre du Métier Gantois_ does not reveal another example, is there
-quoted as a homage rendered to the memory of Michelle de France,
-Countess of Flanders, and first wife of Philip the Good, who appears
-to have held the two brothers in special favour. The Corporation, in
-thus granting to them the professional franchise of Ghent, at the
-same time expressed their esteem for their talent, and the pious
-remembrance in which they held the memory of their Queen Consort.
-
-Of Hubert's early work we have absolutely no record, and no picture
-is known which bears his signature. Indeed, the only paintings which
-can with absolute certainty be assigned to him are the great Ghent
-altar-piece, painted for Jodoc Vydt, on which he was engaged at the
-time of his death, and which was finished six years later by his
-brother Jan; and the shutter of a triptych at the Royal Gallery at
-{12} Copenhagen, which represents Robert Poortier, of Ghent,
-protected by St. Anthony, with the Angel Gabriel on the reverse.
-Robert Poortier's will, made in 1426, a few months before Hubert's
-death, mentions this triptych as being in the master's workshop. On
-the internal evidence of these two authentic works attempts have been
-made to trace Hubert's hand in several other pictures, though their
-number is so far restricted to only seven. It has been suggested
-that Hubert may in the earlier years of his career have devoted
-himself to miniature painting; and the wonderful Turin miniatures
-published by M. Paul Durrieu in the _Gazette des Beaux-Arts_ (January
-and February, 1903), which date from the same period, show such
-marked kinship with Hubert's conception and style that they may well
-be the work of his own hand. The scarcity of his paintings would
-thus be accounted for if, anterior to the experiments which led to
-the invention of the new method of oil-painting about 1410, Hubert
-had exercised his rare gifts in a different field.
-
-From the wording of his epitaph, which has been handed down to us, it
-is made clear that Hubert died on September 18, 1426. As translated
-by Sir Charles Eastlake, in his "Materials {13} for a History of
-Oil-Painting," this epitaph runs as follows: "Take warning from me,
-ye who walk over me. I was as you are, but am now buried dead
-beneath you. Thus it appears that neither art nor medicine availed
-me. Art, honour, wisdom, power, affluence, are not spared when death
-comes. I was called Hubert van Eyck; I am now food for worms.
-Formerly known and highly honoured in painting, this was all shortly
-after turned to nothing. It was in the year of the Lord one thousand
-four hundred and twenty-six, on the eighteenth day of September, that
-I rendered up my soul to God, in sufferings. Pray God for me, ye who
-love art, that I may attain to His sight. Flee sin, turn to the
-best, for you must follow me at last." Hubert was buried in the
-crypt of the Cathedral of St. Bavo at Ghent. When, owing to some
-structural alterations to the church, this crypt was destroyed, the
-tombs, including Hubert's, were removed and the bones dispersed.
-Only Hubert's right arm was placed in an iron case and exhibited as a
-relic.
-
-
-
-
-{14}
-
-JAN VAN EYCK
-
-The date of Jan van Eyck's birth is as uncertain as that of his
-brother's. Tradition has it that the two brothers are portrayed on
-the panel of the great Ghent altar-piece, which represents _The Just
-Judges_. These portraits suggest a difference of about twenty years
-between the two, so that the birth of Jan would have to be placed
-somewhere between 1386 and 1390. Hubert being thus about twenty
-years his senior, it is natural to suppose that Jan received from him
-his early education in matters of art. Guicciardini, van Mander, and
-other early writers, affirm that the two brothers worked in
-collaboration, and there is no reason to doubt that Jan in his early
-years assisted his brother in many or most of his paintings--perhaps
-even in the Ghent altar-piece, which he finished after the elder
-brother's death. It is certainly a curious fact that, with a single
-exception--the completely over-painted _Enthronement of St. Thomas of
-Canterbury_ at {15} Chatsworth--all the signed pictures by Jan bear
-dates posterior to the death of Hubert. And it is equally
-significant that the first of this series of ten signed pictures is
-dated 1432, the year of the completion of the Ghent altar-piece,
-which was the last work in which both brothers had a share.
-
-[Illustration: THE ENTHRONEMENT OF THOMAS À BECKET, BY JAN VAN EYCK.]
-
-The chief events in the life of Jan van Eyck can be gathered fairly
-accurately from contemporary records and documents. In 1422 Jan
-entered the service of John of Bavaria, at that time Duke of
-Luxembourg, whose household accounts show the payment of a weekly
-wage to the artist, from October 25, 1422, till September, 1424, for
-the decoration of the palace at the Hague. M. Bouchot mentioned an
-earlier record of Jan's doings, when he believed he discovered him at
-Cambrai decorating a Paschal candle. But the eminent French critic
-probably confused Jan van Eyck with one Jan de Yeke, whose name
-occurs in the accounts of the Cathedral of Cambrai as that of a man
-employed in 1422 and many following years in painting crosses,
-clocks, and candles on the outer wall of the cathedral to deter the
-passers-by from committing nuisances!
-
-In the spring of 1425 Jan van Eyck was {16} appointed _varlet de
-chambre_ to Philip the Good, and though this princely patron availed
-himself of the master's services as a painter, it would appear from a
-letter signed by Philip, and bearing the date March 12, 1434, that
-the appointment of Jan to the position of Court painter to the
-Burgundian Prince only took place in that year (1434). Still, as
-_varlet de chambre_ Jan van Eyck must have enjoyed a position of
-considerable trust and emolument at the hands of his august master,
-for on more than one occasion we find him entrusted with important
-missions, some of which took him to the Portuguese Court. The first
-of these excursions took place when he had resided for three months
-at Bruges. On his return he went at Philip's order to live at Lille,
-where he remained until 1428. His missions were generally of a
-secret nature, but on one of these occasions, in the year 1428, we
-find Jan again absent in Portugal, returning to the Court of Philip
-in the suite of Isabella of Portugal, who was destined to become the
-royal consort. Gachard, in the _Collection de Documents Inédits
-concevnant l'Histoire de Belgique_, gives a detailed account of the
-artist's movements from his departure from Écluse on October 19,
-1428, to his {17} return in January, 1430. According to these dates,
-which are gathered from contemporary documents, the ambassadors with
-the Infanta set out from Lisbon on October 8, 1429. The apparent
-discrepancy between these dates and that of January 10, 1429, which,
-at the Golden Fleece Exhibition at Bruges in 1907, was given as the
-date of the foundation of this Order, and consequently of the
-nuptials of Philip and Isabella and of Jan's return to Bruges, is
-easily accounted for if we remember that the beginning of the year
-was then reckoned from March 1, so that January, 1430, of our own
-reckoning would tally with January, 1429, of the contemporary
-calendar.
-
-Jan's first duty on arrival at the Portuguese Court was to paint the
-portrait of the Princess. It appears that he was at work upon this
-picture for a month. Several portraits of Isabella are still extant
-painted in the manner of the van Eycks, and pointing to the same
-origin, but none has so far been discovered to possess qualities or
-details which would justify its identification as Jan's original
-panel. Evidently Jan's portrait was pleasing to the eye of the
-Lowland monarch, for upon Philip expressing his satisfaction with the
-personal appearance {18} of Isabella, the ambassadors and the bride
-immediately embarked on the homeward journey. Soon after his
-return--namely, in 1431--Jan bought a house in Bruges, where he
-married and continued to work, after the completion of the Ghent
-altar-piece in the following year, until his death, which took place
-about the end of June, 1441. He was buried in the churchyard of St.
-Donatian at Bruges, but his body was subsequently removed to a vault
-near the font of that church.
-
-Mr. Weale, while arranging the archives of St. Donatian at Bruges,
-discovered in the account of the fabric of the church for the year
-beginning June 25, 1440, and ending June 24, 1441, entries of sums
-received for the grave of Jan van Eyck and for the ringing of the
-funeral bell, and in the obituary of the church his anniversary set
-down as celebrated on July 9. In an article in the _Burlington
-Magazine_ (1904) Mr. Weale makes the following comment: "Hence it
-appears certain that he died on July 9, 1440. This date, now
-generally accepted, is, however, incorrect. Two entries in the
-account of Walter Poulain, Receiver-General of Flanders for the year
-ending December 31, 1441, prove that John's death {19} took place in
-1441, but leave the exact day uncertain." Three entries show that
-Jan died about the end of June, and that on July 22 a grant of 360
-livres--the equivalent of her husband's salary for half a year--was
-made to Jan's widow by the Duke Philip in recognition of the services
-rendered by her deceased husband. It also shows that Jan's wife was
-named Margaret, and that he left at least two children--one, the
-Duke's godchild, Philip or Philippina, born in June, 1434; the other,
-Lyennie, who became a nun at Maaseyck in 1449, which lends colour to
-the theory that Maaseyck was her father's birthplace.
-
-His epitaph, as translated by Sir Charles Eastlake, runs: "Here lies
-Joannes, who was celebrated for his surpassing skill, and whose
-felicity in painting excited wonder. He painted breathing forms, and
-the earth's surface, covered with flowery vegetation, completing each
-work to the life. Hence Phidias and Apelles must give place to him,
-and Polycletus be considered his inferior in art. Call, therefore,
-the Fates most cruel, who have snatched from us such a man. Yet
-cease to weep, for destiny is immutable; pray only now to God that he
-may live in heaven."
-
-
-
-
-{20}
-
-THE INVENTION OF OIL-PAINTING
-
-Tradition has for centuries connected the name of Van Eyck with the
-invention of oil-painting, and has fixed upon the year 1410 as the
-date of this invention. This, at least, is the year given by such
-early writers as Guicciardini, Vasari, Opmeer, and Karel van Mander.
-Vasari, indeed, gives a most detailed and circumstantial account of
-this epoch-making event, which, according to the Aretine biographer,
-was brought about by the single-handed efforts of Jan. And it is
-easy to understand that the fame of the elder brother had in the
-sixteenth century become obscured and merged in that of the
-brilliantly successful Jan, the _varlet de chambre_ and official
-Court painter. This "Giovanni of Bruggia," Vasari tells us, "after
-having given extreme labour to the completion of a certain picture,
-and with great diligence brought it to a successful issue, he gave it
-the varnish and set it to dry in the sun, as is the custom. But
-whether because {21} the heat was too violent, or that the wood was
-badly joined or insufficiently seasoned, the picture gave way at the
-joinings, opening in a very deplorable manner. Thereupon Giovanni,
-perceiving the mischief done to his work by the heat of the sun,
-determined to proceed in such a manner that the same thing should
-never again injure his work in like manner. And as he was no less
-embarrassed by his varnishes than by the process of tempera-painting,
-he turned his thoughts to the discovery of some sort of varnish that
-would dry in the shadow, to the end that he need not expose his
-pictures to the sun. Accordingly, after having made many experiments
-on substances, pure and mixed, he finally discovered that linseed oil
-and oil of nuts dried more readily than any others of all that he had
-tried. Having boiled these oils, therefore, with other mixtures, he
-thus obtained the varnish which he--or, rather, all the painters of
-the world--had so long desired. He made experiments with many other
-substances, but finally decided that mixing the colours with these
-oils gave a degree of firmness to the work which not only secured it
-against all injury from water when once dried, but also imparted so
-{22} much life to the colours that they exhibited a sufficient lustre
-in themselves without the aid of varnish; and what appeared to him
-more extraordinary than all besides was that the colours thus treated
-were much more easily united and blent than when in tempera."
-
-Vasari then proceeds to tell us of Jan's great success, of the
-"blameless envy" of all other artists in Flanders and abroad, from
-whom he would jealously guard his secret, until, in his old age, he
-imparted it to "his disciple Ruggieri da Bruggia," a name which
-surely can hide no other personality than Rogier van der Weyden's.
-Of Hubert never a mention, save a short reference in the last volume,
-in the chapter on "Divers Flemish Artists." As in most of Vasari's
-anecdotes, there is probably a foundation of truth to the elaborate
-network of fiction. The incident explained by him at great length
-may have occurred, but its hero can only have been Hubert, and not
-Jan, who was then a mere youth working in his brother's _bottega_,
-and may have assisted Hubert in his experiments. Though it has since
-been doubted that Hubert or Jan van Eyck actually invented
-oil-painting, no evidence has yet been discovered to prove they were
-not the first to employ oil {23} as a medium in putting colour on the
-prepared panel. It is true that oil as a protective varnish was
-frequently used during the fourteenth century, and it is probable
-that some kind of oil-colour was employed in the colouring of
-statuary and in the painting of banners at an early period. For this
-reason the statement that Hubert and Jan van Eyck "discovered
-painting in oils" has been disputed, and generally accepted as
-inaccurate, but the question is one rather of terminology than of the
-technical point.
-
-As the term "oil-painting" is generally accepted to-day, it is fairer
-to credit these brothers with the invention, than to speak of their
-achievement as an improvement in oil-painting, for hitherto the
-medium in common use had been a preparation of gum and white of eggs.
-And as there is neither definite proof nor any good evidence that oil
-had ever been used as a _medium to mix the colours_ for
-panel-painting before Hubert and Jan made their experiments, we
-surely have an easy distinction to draw. The brothers Van Eyck were
-the first successfully to mix the oil with the colours for painting,
-and this process is what we now understand as "painting in oils."
-The use of {24} oils as a protective or varnish does not enter into
-the painting, since such had only been used on the completion of the
-work.
-
-For the rest, the brothers either acted more generously than Vasari
-would have it, or they did not altogether succeed in guarding their
-precious secret, for their method appears to have been fairly
-generally practised at Ghent about 1420. We find, for instance, that
-in 1419 the "free painters," Willem van Appoele and Johannes
-Maertens, received a commission to paint some pictures for the town
-hall of Ghent in "good oil-colours." It is also certain that Rogier
-van der Weyden--Vasari's Ruggieri da Bruggia--never was a pupil of
-either Jan or Hubert van Eyck.
-
-
-
-
-{25}
-
-THE ART OF THE VAN EYCKS
-
-The position occupied by Hubert and Jan van Eyck in the history of
-art is one of unparalleled importance. A deep gulf divides them from
-all their immediate precursors, who seem to belong altogether to a
-different epoch--nay, a different world. Just as their improvement
-in the technical methods of their craft opened up a vista of till
-then unthought of possibilities, so their conception of life and of
-pictorial form marks the beginning of a new era, the passing of the
-vague mediæval idealism into an art that is based upon the close
-study and loving appreciation of Nature. Perhaps too much stress has
-been laid upon the so-called "realism" of the brothers van Eyck, and
-more especially of Jan. Again and again critics have insisted upon
-Jan's uncompromising love of literal truth, upon his insistence on
-details that are in themselves at times repulsively ugly. This
-realism was tempered with deep sentiment and a sense {26} of style
-which kept such details well subordinated to the general scheme, and
-it is in this respect that Jan van Eyck stands immeasurably above
-Melchior Broederlam, who occupied the position of _varlet de chambre_
-and Court painter to Philip the Bold, the grandfather of Jan's
-patron. Broederlam, indeed, as may be seen in his famous altar-piece
-at Dijon, seems to be a far more pronounced realist than Jan van
-Eyck, simply because he lacks that sense of style and harmony and
-subordination--in short, that concentration--which makes us forget
-the realistic detail in the beauty of the complete thing.
-
-The real precursors of the van Eycks were the sculptors who carved
-the tombs, monuments, and reliefs in the churches of Tournai. In
-these we first find the faithful adherence to the facts of Nature and
-the understanding of the subtleties of form which in painting appear
-first in the works of the brothers van Eyck, who may have also owed
-much of their knowledge to the flourishing school of Flemish
-miniature-painters, if, indeed, Hubert in his early days did not
-actually practise this art. Yet, even though the new era in painting
-is, as it were, heralded by the new tendencies in plastic art--just
-as in {27} Italy Giotto was preceded by the sculptor Niccolo
-Pisani--there is something wonderful, something almost difficult to
-realise, in the sudden appearance of complete and perfect works of
-art, like the paintings of the van Eycks, that with masterly sureness
-express the whole essence of the Gothic style, whilst at the same
-time they reveal a new understanding of the inexhaustible beauty of
-Nature, a keen perception of structural growth and of individual
-characteristics, and, above all, an almost modern understanding of
-the play of light upon figures and objects in and out of doors.
-
-The picturesque, brilliant, varied life of such cities as Bruges and
-Ghent at the beginning of the fifteenth century cannot have failed to
-stimulate the artists' power of observation, to sharpen their
-perception of the differences of race, gesture, and costume; for the
-streets and squares of the rich commercial centres of Flanders were
-filled from morning to night with ever-moving crowds of courtiers and
-merchants from all parts of the world--Spaniards and Italians,
-Germans, and Slavonians, and even Moors and Turks, all in their
-different costumes and following their different customs. At the
-same time the painters' eyes were {28} constantly met by the wonders
-of the creations of architects, armourers, and other craftsmen who
-flourished under the protection of the Burgundian rulers; and one may
-well understand the love and enthusiasm with which a receptive artist
-like Jan van Eyck applied himself to the faithful delineation of the
-splendours and of the seething life by which he was surrounded.
-
-Although the two brothers were in the habit of working together upon
-the same pictures, which has given rise to many disputes as to the
-authorship of unsigned works, and although Jan, the realist, at times
-approached, though never equalled, the spirituality and decorative
-sumptuousness of Hubert, whilst Hubert, the stylist and greater mind
-of the two, sometimes vied with Jan in the minute and exquisite
-elaboration of details, the signed works of Jan and those parts of
-the Ghent altar-piece which are unquestionably Hubert's own have made
-it possible to characterise the distinguishing qualities of the two
-masters. Hubert far exceeds his brother in monumental
-impressiveness, in grandeur of style, in idealistic significance, in
-sumptuousness, and even in sense of beauty. Even the folds of his
-draperies have a fulness and a noble swing which form a striking {29}
-contrast to the more laboured irregularity of Jan's, as may be seen
-in comparing the garments of God the Father, the Virgin Mary, and St.
-John, of the Ghent altar-piece, with the curiously broken folds of
-Barbara's dress in Jan's picture at Antwerp.
-
-[Illustration: THE MAN WITH THE PINKS. BY JAN VAN EYCK.]
-
-The conception of such ideas as are embodied in the _Adoration of the
-Lamb_, or in the _Triumph of the Church over the Synagogue_, at the
-Madrid Museum, would also have been quite beyond the pale of the more
-prosaic Jan's imagination. Jan, on the other hand, excelled in
-stating the reality of the visible world. Generalisations of human
-types or of landscape features are unknown to him. He was the first
-to fix upon his panels all the carefully studied and exquisitely
-wrought details of the actual world--sky and mountain and river,
-forest and fields, flowers and trees, and the churches and castles,
-houses and bridges, placed in Nature by human hands. It is scarcely
-too much to say that he was the first landscape-painter, just as he
-was the first portrait painter in the modern sense of the word--the
-first who could paint a scene so that it could be identified after
-the lapse of centuries, the first who could paint a portrait so that
-the model {30} stands before us living and breathing, in all his
-beauty or ugliness. To appreciate the keenness of his vision one has
-only to examine the marvellous Arnolfini group at the National
-Gallery, with its almost scientific treatment of softly diffused
-indoor light. A comparison of this picture, from the point of view
-of lighting, with anything that was painted before the days of the
-van Eycks will reveal perhaps the greatest step forward that is on
-record in the whole history of painting.
-
-
-
-
-{31}
-
-COLLABORATION OF THE BROTHERS
-
-When piecing together the lives of the brothers van Eyck, it is
-necessary to delve into a confusing mass of conflicting
-statements--evidence which is only in part to be relied upon, and the
-theories of those who have devoted a vast amount of time and labour
-to the unearthing, sorting, and arranging of such evidence as they
-have been able to lay their hands upon. Incomplete as the records
-are, we must, until further evidence has been discovered, accept the
-obvious conclusions from the indisputable data left to us.
-
-We have ten unquestionably genuine signed pictures by Jan, and a
-small group of others which may, from internal evidence, be safely
-ascribed to the same source. We know that the great _Adoration of
-the Lamb_, though designed in its entirety by Hubert, is the combined
-work of the two masters. We know also that the Copenhagen panel of
-Robert Poortier {32} was in Hubert's studio at the time of his
-death--perhaps unfinished. The remaining pictures generally accepted
-as genuine van Eycks have been variously ascribed to Hubert, or to
-Jan, or to their united efforts. In view of the fact that not a
-single really authenticated work by Hubert alone is known, special
-significance must be attached to a statement, several times repeated
-by early writers, that Hubert and Jan "continually painted on the
-same works."
-
-In trying to solve the difficult question which part of the extant
-_oeuvre_ is Hubert's and which is Jan's, our knowledge of Jan's
-journeys to the South assumes considerable importance. For Hubert's
-travels we lack proof--they are mere conjecture. But there is
-documentary evidence of Jan's journey to Portugal in 1428, in
-addition to which Mr. Weale has, I understand, recently unearthed
-some further documents which establish another and earlier journey of
-Jan to Spain. On these travels Jan must have become well acquainted
-with certain plants peculiar to the South, and especially the dwarf
-palm or palmetto, which is confined almost exclusively to Spain and
-Portugal. It is therefore not unreasonable to assign to him those
-{33} portions of the disputed pictures in which this palmetto
-appears. Some authorities hold that Jan did not have any independent
-artistic career before Hubert's death, and that in the division of
-labour Hubert's share was, as a rule, the general design and the
-painting of the figures, whilst Jan filled in the landscape and
-architectural backgrounds.
-
-The collaboration theory has been advanced by Mr. A. Marks, whose
-knowledge of Flemish art is profound, and whose deductions are as
-conscientious as they are convincing. To him we are indebted for an
-interesting paper upon the subject, which is at once exhaustive and
-reasonable. To retail all that Mr. Marks advances in support of his
-theory would be to reprint his treatise _in toto_; but though it is
-impossible here to follow all his arguments, it is equally impossible
-to avoid reference to the valuable correspondence between him and Mr.
-James Weale in the _Athenæum_, between November, 1902, and April,
-1903. This correspondence arose from an article by Mr. A. Marks in
-the _Athenæum_ in May, 1900, in which attention is drawn to the
-presence of the palmetto in the picture of _St. Francis receiving the
-Stigmata_ (now in possession of {34} Mr. J. G. Johnson, Pennsylvania;
-a copy in Turin), which picture had been formerly variously ascribed
-to Henri met de Bles, Joachim Patinier, and Mostaert. Mr. Marks has
-since supplemented and explained his views in the essay mentioned;
-whilst Miss Frances Weale has published an excellent study on the
-"van Eycks," which, in a concise and interesting form, presents her
-father's views on the subject.
-
-It is, of course, likely that nothing is proved as to the authorship
-of certain paintings by the presence or absence of the exotic plants
-or other details ascribed to one or other of the brothers. Supposing
-the assumed visit of Hubert to Southern Europe to be a fact, Jan may
-have made use of his brother's studies to embellish his landscapes;
-or Hubert may have utilized Jan's studies. But either supposition is
-extremely unlikely. We have certain proof that Jan did several times
-visit the South, while Hubert's sojourn in these parts is pure
-surmise; and not only is it likely that, rather than make use of
-second-hand material, Hubert left portions of the pictures to be
-painted by Jan, but the examination of the various pictures reveals
-the same hand in the painting of the {35} recurring details. We
-must, then, take the facts and the most likely deductions in
-preference to deductions drawn from data which are merely conjectural.
-
-Documentary evidence proves that Jan, immediately after his reception
-by the King of Portugal on January 12, 1429, began the work of
-painting the portrait of the Infanta, which, by the way, was executed
-in tempera, and not in oil. This painting is, unfortunately, lost,
-and though there are several portraits of Isabella now extant, of
-which one at least may be a copy of Jan's picture, there is nothing
-in any of them that can be traced to this master. He took a month
-over its completion, and while the Court and Embassy were awaiting
-the decision of Philip, to whom the picture had been sent, Jan and
-his colleagues had time to visit several places of interest and
-people of distinction. They travelled to the north to see the shrine
-of St. Iago of Compostella; then to the south, where they were
-received in turn by the Duke of Arjona and the King of Castile; and
-then to Granada, in the extreme south, where they visited the King of
-that city. It is stated that they also visited many other places;
-and, as from Granada they returned to Lisbon, {36} they must have
-passed through the country lying between Cordova and Seville.
-
-Now, through the whole of the south-eastern portion of the peninsula
-the palmetto, or dwarf-palm, flourishes abundantly, and Jan could not
-fail during his tour to become well acquainted with it. In a letter
-which Mr. Marks quotes in his paper read at the Royal Society of
-Literature, June 24, 1903, Mr. Luffmann, Director of the School of
-Horticulture in Melbourne, says that the triangle formed by Seville,
-Cordova, and Osuna, is "a piece of country which is literally overrun
-by the plant," and that the root of the palmetto is commonly used in
-those parts as fuel. In Italy it is but of rare occurrence, though
-it grows in some of the islands of the Mediterranean; whilst in the
-parts of Spain and Portugal visited by Jan it is almost impossible
-for the visitor to avoid seeing it.
-
-Failing, then, even the probability that Hubert ever saw the palmetto
-growing, we must credit Jan with the painting of this plant, which,
-like all the other exotics, must have been carefully studied from
-nature, for they are represented in most minute, careful, and
-conscientious manner, and are absolutely true to {37} life. The
-palmetto occurs in the picture of _St. Francis receiving the
-Stigmata_ (above referred to); in the _St. Anthony with the Donor_ at
-Copenhagen; and in _The Three Marys at the Sepulchre_ in the
-collection of Sir Frederick Cook at Richmond. The portions of these
-paintings by Hubert van Eyck, where the palmetto occurs, may
-therefore be safely ascribed to the hand of Jan.
-
-Other exotic plants, which are not restricted to Spain and Portugal,
-occur in these pictures; but they are painted by the same hand, and
-betray the same loving adherence to truth, and a similar familiarity
-with the plants as they grow. It is therefore patent that they, too,
-must be ascribed to Jan, for it is impossible to suppose that the
-younger brother's work on these pictures was simply that of adding
-the by no means necessary dwarf-palm to Hubert's completed
-landscapes. Jan was probably responsible for the design and
-execution of these landscapes. These other exotics also occur in the
-Ghent altar-piece, in the _Calvary_ of the Berlin Museum, and in the
-copy, at the same museum, of a lost _Virgin and Child_, Mr. Marks
-produces further evidence to prove that Jan must have painted not
-only the foliage, but the {38} whole of the landscapes where the
-little palm appears, including in most cases the architecture. He
-draws attention to the architectural features in the _Chancellor
-Rolin with Saints_ in the Louvre, and the signed and dated
-altar-piece by Jan in the museum at Bruges: "The architecture in
-these pictures is not a real architecture--that is, it has not been
-copied from any actual examples.... Agreement is general that it is
-an architecture invented, not merely copied." These pictures furnish
-evidence of the painter having visited Italy, for marble is
-represented in a most lavish manner. This marble is not
-characteristic of Northern architecture; its use is distinctly
-Italian. The painting of it displays the usual care and
-conscientiousness common to all Jan's works. Further points cited by
-Mr. Marks as evidence of Jan's work in various pictures are the
-representations of snow-mountains in various works, and the presence
-of a flying flock of geese.
-
-The former is of greater importance, as this again points to
-acquaintance with the South, where alone the painter could have seen
-snow-mountains. Now, as very similar architecture to that in the
-altar-piece at Bruges, which is signed by Jan van Eyck, is found in
-the _Chancellor {39} Rolin_ (Louvre), the _Virgin and Child_
-(Dresden), and the _Carthusian Monk with Saints_ (Gustave de
-Rothschild, Paris), the suggestion is clear that in all these
-pictures the architecture is the work of Jan, and several notable
-critics hold this view. In three of these four paintings we find the
-snow-mountains--namely, in the Dresden triptych, the _Chancellor
-Rolin_, and the _Carthusian Monk_. And having established Jan as the
-author of these snow-mountains, we must credit him with the
-landscapes where this feature occurs in other pictures--_i.e._, the
-Ghent altar-piece, the _Crucifixion_ of the Hermitage in St.
-Petersburg, the _Calvary_ of the Berlin Museum, and the _Three Marys_
-of Sir Frederick Cook. The theory that Jan is responsible for the
-snow-mountains is amply supported by the very reasonable deduction
-that he must at some time have visited Italy. This is gathered from
-the Italian character of the architecture, together with the snow
-seen in the Rothschild picture, the _Chancellor Rolin_, the
-_Carthusian Monk_, and the Dresden picture. The theory is further
-supported by the presence of the palmetto together with
-snow-mountains in the _Three Marys_ of Sir Frederick Cook. Here the
-palmetto proves the authorship of the {40} landscape, and as the view
-contains snow-mountains it very materially strengthens the
-supposition that it was Jan, and not Hubert, who painted them, and
-who consequently must have been to the South of Europe--probably
-Italy--to have seen them.
-
-The flock of geese, which appears in no fewer than six pictures in
-addition to Jan's signed _St. Barbara_ at Antwerp, is of very much
-less importance than the snow-mountains and the palmetto, for here
-the only use that can be made of it as evidence is its frequent
-repetition. It is found in the landscapes of the Ghent altar-piece,
-in the _Chancellor Rolin_, the _Carthusian Monk_, another version of
-the same subject in the Berlin Museum, _St. Francis receiving the
-Stigmata_, and in the _Three Marys_. But the flock of wild-geese is
-not a feature made use of by the van Eyck brothers only. It seems to
-have been of common occurrence in several other Flemish painters both
-before and after the days of the van Eycks. Nevertheless, its
-presence in the pictures enumerated has been brought forward as
-supplementary evidence to prove the collaboration of Hubert and Jan.
-
-[Illustration: ST. BARBARA. BY JAN VAN EYCK.]
-
-So far, then, evidence has been shown to prove Jan's share in the
-following pictures: the {41} _Chancellor Rolin_, the _Virgin and
-Child_ (at Dresden), the _Carthusian Monk_ in the Rothschild
-Collection, _St. Francis receiving the Stigmata_, _St. Anthony and
-the Donor_ (at Copenhagen), _The Three Marys at the Sepulchre_, the
-_Crucifixion_ (at St. Petersburg), the _Calvary_ (at Berlin), and the
-great altar-piece at St. Bavo, Ghent. Still another point which has
-been generally urged to prove collaboration of the two brothers is
-the appearance of their portraits in certain pictures. They are seen
-in the panel of the Ghent altar-piece representing the _Just Judges_,
-in the copy of the lost _Fountain of Life_ or _The Triumph of the
-Church over the Synagogue_ in the Madrid Museum, and also, it is
-said, in the _Crucifixion_ of St. Petersburg.
-
-Though the theory of collaboration is an old one, doubts have arisen
-amongst modern critics, who have shown a growing tendency to ascribe
-the majority of the unsigned works solely to the elder brother, which
-attribution is refuted not only by the arguments here set forth, but
-by many early writers, including Guicciardini and van Mander, both
-notable and reliable historians.
-
-Before leaving the question of collaboration, a few words must be
-said concerning the {42} controversy that has arisen over the Ghent
-altar-piece. This painting is indisputably the masterpiece of the
-van Eycks, and is of stupendous proportions. The panel of the
-_Adoration of the Lamb_, from which the whole alter-piece takes its
-name, and the shutters depicting the _Just Judges_, the _Warriors of
-Christ_, the _Holy Hermits_, and the _Holy Pilgrims_, have by many
-critics been attributed to Hubert's unaided efforts. It is therefore
-interesting to examine the landscape backgrounds of these five
-panels, and to consider them in the light of the evidence deduced
-from the backgrounds of the other "collaboration" pictures. Evidence
-is needed to prove that Jan's work was not merely confined to
-finishing the picture after his brother's death (the inscription
-states that it was begun by Hubert and finished by Jan), which in
-itself, of course, does not prove collaboration of the brothers.
-
-In the first place, Jan's handiwork must be identified. In the
-pictures already discussed it has been proved fairly conclusively
-that Jan is responsible for the painting of the exotic plants, the
-snow-mountains, the flock of wild geese, and the architectural
-setting. The landscapes in the Ghent altar-piece contain exotic {43}
-plants, wild geese, and snow-mountains. Of the latter it is
-difficult to speak; they are whitish in colour, but their formation
-is neither so natural nor so well designed as in the _Three Marys_.
-The exotic plants alone prove Jan's work here. The birds may, or may
-not, be very important. They serve, however, by their repeated
-appearance in Jan's other pictures, as auxiliary evidence. The
-question for proof, however, is not the presence of Jan's work on
-this picture, but the presence of his work before the death of his
-brother. And from this point of view it is significant that, though
-other exotics are present in profusion, the palmetto--a sure result
-of Jan's visit to Portugal--does not appear. The whole work is
-stated in the inscription to have been finished on May 6, 1432, two
-years after Jan's return from Portugal. Now, the absence of the
-palmetto from this picture points to one of two conclusions--either
-the work left for Jan to do in the completion was comparatively
-trifling, or that the greater part of the picture, including the
-design of the landscapes, was already finished before Jan met with
-the palmetto.
-
-That the work of the younger brother was not insignificant is
-distinctly stated in the text {44} of the inscription: "The painter,
-Hubert van Eyck, greater than whom none is to be found, began [the
-work]; the bulk was completed by his brother Jan, second to him in
-art, relying on the request of Jodoc Vydt. This verse invites you to
-contemplate that which was completed on May 6, 1432." This
-translation from the Latin is chosen from three versions. The other
-renderings seem to be given by those who would translate the word
-_pondus_ as _work_, and thus give the younger brother credit for no
-more than finishing an incomplete picture. The text has, however,
-been translated by several learned scholars, who are entirely free
-from the taint of partisanship, and it is now generally agreed that
-the translation given here is the correct one.
-
-There is yet another possibility which the absence of the palmetto
-points to--namely, that the picture was practically finished before
-Jan's visit to Portugal, save some very minor details, which were
-completed in 1432, The presence of the other exotics points to this
-view being correct, for it would obviously be unlikely that Jan
-should omit the palmetto from all these five landscapes after his
-careful studies of his favourite plant. The other exotics, not being
-{45} a result of the journey, may very well have been painted before
-1429. Collaboration in this work is further proved by the portraits
-of the two brothers.
-
-
-
-
-{46}
-
-OUR ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-The supreme masterpiece of the brothers van Eyck, the work which, in
-the history of Flemish art, has played the part that was allotted to
-Masaccio's frescoes at the Carmine, Florence, in the art of Italy, is
-the gigantic polyptych painted for the chapel of the Vydt family in
-the Cathedral of St. John (now St. Bavo) in Ghent, and known from the
-subject of the chief panel as the _Adoration of the Lamb_. In its
-original form this altar-piece, which is now divided between St. Bavo
-Cathedral and the museums of Berlin and Brussels, was composed of
-twelve interior panels and a predella (which has unfortunately been
-destroyed). Including the backs of the shutters, which, like the
-panels themselves, are covered with the most minute and exquisite
-painting, the painted surface extends to over 1,000 square feet. The
-centre panel alone, from which the whole altar-piece takes its name,
-measures 7¼ feet in width by 4½ feet in height.
-
-{47}
-
-Horizontally the whole altar-piece is divided into three portions.
-The central panel of the middle tier is occupied by the _Adoration of
-the Lamb_. Like the rest of the picture, it is treated in a
-decorative spirit, the grouping of the figures, the architecture, and
-the foliage being almost geometrically arranged and balanced. In a
-very beautiful and peaceful landscape is set up, on a green mound in
-the centre, an altar, upon which stands the Lamb of God. Its breast
-is pierced in the customary manner, the sacred blood flowing into a
-chalice at its feet. Immediately around the altar fourteen angels,
-symbolical, probably, of the stations of the Passion of Christ, kneel
-in adoration. The two in front of the altar offer incense, while
-emblems of the Passion are held by others. The cross is held on the
-left, and the pillar of the scourging stands on the right. In the
-foreground, also in the centre and below the altar, is the Fountain
-of Life, which divides two groups of worshippers: on the left are the
-Jewish prophets and patriarchs of the Old Testament, whilst the crowd
-on the right is composed of Popes, Bishops, priests, monks, and
-laymen. In the background, emerging from the luxuriant forest
-immediately behind {48} the altar, two processions slowly wend their
-way. The group on the right is composed of holy women, foremost of
-whom come St. Agnes with a lamb, St. Catherine, and others. The
-Procession on the left again includes Popes, Bishops, and monks.
-These are said to be the confessors. Above all hovers the Holy Ghost
-in the form of the dove.
-
-The painting of these figures is most exquisite. The draperies are
-soft and pleasing; the colour is deep and rich; while the faces are
-remarkable for their character and variety of expression. The jewels
-and ornaments worn by some of the Popes and Bishops are drawn with
-loving care, and the enrichments of the vestments betray a patience
-and skill that create wonder. In the distance, above the trees, are
-seen cities with many towers and churches, behind which are hills in
-the remote distance. The foreground of the beautiful, soft,
-spring-like grass is profusely enriched by the growth of innumerable
-flowers and shrubs, all of which are painted with consummate skill
-and truth. The whole picture makes a profound effect by its
-sumptuous splendour, and by the masterly disposal of light and shade.
-
-The two panels on the left are the _Just Judges_ {49} and _Christ's
-Warriors_. In the _Judges_ the whole lower half of the picture is
-taken up by figures on horses. Behind a cliff in the middle distance
-is seen a forest and some buildings of elaborate architecture, which
-may represent tribunals. The bridles and trappings of the horses are
-richly jewelled, and altogether the best is made of the opportunity
-of rendering with goldsmith-like precision all manner of gorgeous
-materials, costly and beautifully emblazoned banners, and armour and
-trappings of beautiful design. Tradition has it that two of the
-_Judges_ are portraits of the painters, the one in a black garment
-with a red rosary, who is turning towards the spectator, being the
-younger brother Jan. To strengthen the theory that this figure was
-painted by Jan after Hubert's death, Mr. Weale suggests that the
-black habit and red rosary denote mourning, probably for his brother
-Hubert.
-
-As regards the other panel, Mr. Six has advanced an interesting
-theory with respect to the soldier who wears a blue head-dress. He
-calls attention to a _pentimento_ in substituting for a crown on this
-figure the blue head-dress. Mr. Six claims to have identified this
-figure as Jean Sans Peur, who probably saw the painting, {50} and
-objected to being represented with a crown while Godfrey de Bouillon
-wore only a fur cap, and therefore persuaded the painter to alter it
-to the blue cap or bonnet which was the badge of the Burgundians
-against the Armagnacs. From this the supposed alteration must have
-taken place a little after 1410, whereas, according to early art
-historians, the altar-piece was only begun between 1415 and 1420.
-
-[Illustration: THE JUST JUDGES, AND CHRIST'S WARRIORS. BY HUBERT AND
-JAN VAN EYCK.]
-
-Though the limitations of the present little volume make it
-impossible to reproduce the other panels which originally formed part
-of the colossal altar-piece, it will not be out of place here to
-describe them in detail, as they all form part of a wonderfully
-complete and harmonious scheme. As pendants to the _Judges_ and
-_Warriors_, to the right of the central panel were the _Holy Hermits_
-and the _Holy Pilgrims_. Rocks, cliff, and foliage are found in the
-background of the hermits, but, as suggestive of retirement and
-remoteness, no architecture is seen. The pilgrims are represented
-walking up a valley towards the spectator. On the right, in the
-background, is a hill covered with various trees, and in the distance
-is seen a river and meadows, with a town and low hills beyond. The
-pilgrims are led by St. Christopher, {51} whose giant proportions
-tower above the rest of the procession.
-
-The upper tier of the polyptych consists of seven panels, or rather
-three panels, the combined width of which corresponds with that of
-the _Adoration_ panel below, and two shutters on each side. The
-grand figure in the centre panel, majestically enthroned, has been
-variously held to represent God the Father and Christ, and the Latin
-inscription may be equally applied to both. Perhaps it was the
-painter's idea to personify both in one figure. On His brow is the
-Crown of Heaven, and at His feet the Crown of Purity and Innocence,
-which the Lamb has won on earth. The panel to His right shows the
-Virgin, gazing in devotion at an open book in her hands--a conception
-of such purity and innocence that it recalls the spirit of Fra
-Angelico. To his left is the equally nobly conceived figure of St.
-John, an open book in his lap, with his right hand raised, as it
-were, in exhortation. The monumental style of these figures, and
-their deep significance, leave no doubt that these panels are from
-the brush of the elder brother Hubert.
-
-These panels are flanked by two shutters on each side--a choir of
-angels and St. Cecilia {52} with some angels within, and _Adam_ and
-_Eve_ at the extreme ends. The relentless realism of the latter,
-which borders close on ugliness, marks them as the work of Jan. The
-figures are undoubtedly painted from life, and were held to be so
-wonderful that for some time the whole altar-piece was known as the
-"Adam and Eve painting." Jan may also be held responsible for the
-angels and St. Cecilia, both of which have many characteristics that
-tally with well-authenticated works by the master. The predella
-which originally adorned the altar-piece has unfortunately been
-destroyed. The reverse of the lower shutters shows the figures of
-St. John the Evangelist, St. John the Baptist, and portraits of the
-donor, Jodoc Vydt, and his wife; and of the upper shutters, the
-Annunciation and figures of prophets and sibyls. Only the
-_Adoration_ and the three important panels above (God the Father, the
-Virgin, and St. John) remain at the Cathedral of St. Bavo at Ghent;
-the _Adam_ and _Eve_ are now at the Brussels Museum, and the other
-shutters at the Berlin Museum.
-
-There are still extant portions of a copy of this great work which
-was painted at the command of Philip II. of Spain by Michael {53}
-Cocxie. The wings of this copy are now added to the original centre
-portion at Ghent. There is a second copy of the Ghent altar-piece in
-the museum of Antwerp.
-
-Upon the consecration of the great masterpiece at St. Bavo vast
-multitudes of people came into the city to see the work, the fame of
-which soon became known throughout the whole of Western Europe. And
-for more than four centuries it remained the wonder of Ghent.
-
-Mr. R. Petrucci states that in 1904, during a demolition of a house
-in the Rue du Gouvernement at Ghent, the old walls were discovered of
-a Steen believed to have been the property of Jodoc Vydt, the patron
-of the van Eycks, who commissioned them to execute the Ghent
-polyptych. In a room upon the third floor, 40 feet up, a square
-window was discovered exactly answering in orientation and position
-to the town which appears in the _Adoration of the Lamb_, and which
-has been recognised as a view over the Rue Courte du Jour. In the
-foreground is seen the Steen, on the site of which was afterwards
-built the little butcher's shop near the present bird-market. Above
-it rises the tournelle of the weavers' chapel, which was used in turn
-as a butcher's shop, a pleasure {54} resort, and a place of auction,
-and is now a garage for motor-cars. Further away, in the background,
-is the old fortified gate which defended the passage of the bridge of
-the canal of the coppersmiths. On the left of the scene is a
-representation of another front of the Steen, which stood on that
-side at the corner of the Rue Courte du Jour and the Rue de Brabant.
-The window reveals this scene exactly. "It seems certain," says Mr.
-Petrucci, "that this was the room in which Hubert and Jan, or, at any
-rate, Jan, van Eyck painted the famous polyptych of the Mystic Lamb."
-
-* * * * *
-
-The portrait group by Jan van Eyck known as _Jan Arnolfini and Jeanne
-dc Chenany, his Wife_, must be counted among the greatest treasures
-of the London National Gallery, as it is, perhaps, the most perfect
-as well as the most characteristic example of the master's art.
-Arnolfini, who was Jan's brother-in-law, a man of solemn and
-depressing countenance, with heavy, drooping lids and long,
-wide-nostrilled nose, is seen standing in his bed-chamber. His right
-hand is raised as if enjoining silence, his left extended to his
-wife, whose open countenance denotes docility and calm. {55}
-Arnolfini wears a tunic of a dark green stuff, over which is a cloak
-of dark red, which reaches well below the knees, and is lined and
-edged with fur. It is divided at the sides from the bottom to the
-shoulder. He wears a large and curiously shaped hat, which in a
-manner resembles a "beefeater's" head-gear. His wife is habited in a
-long and ample robe of green, rather bright in colour, and lined and
-trimmed with white fur. She has raised the folds of the robe in
-front, thus revealing an undergarment of dark blue, trimmed also with
-fur. Round her strikingly high waist is a narrow belt of leather,
-decorated with gilding and polished. On her head is a large kerchief
-with a worked border, which is caught up at the sides in the
-prevailing fashion. Round her neck she wears a double row of pearls.
-The drawing of the drapery, which falls straight to the floor, is
-bold and severe, realistic, and devoid of any attempt at affectation.
-
-In the foreground is a small dog, and to the left, on the floor, a
-pair of pattens. In the centre of the room, slightly behind and
-above the heads of the figures, hangs a brass chandelier of pierced
-work. Of its six arms only one holds a candle, and this is burning,
-the {56} single flame being probably a symbol of conjugal affection
-or unity, as there is no other reason for its presence in a chamber
-well lit by two large windows on the left--one behind the figures and
-one in advance, which is not shown, but the light from which falls
-straight upon the faces. On the wall behind the two figures a
-circular convex mirror reflects a portion of the room, with two
-additional figures. Beside it hangs an amber rosary. The flesh
-painting is admirably soft, delicate, and transparent; the light and
-shade powerful, yet so well arranged that only the closest
-examination will reveal what an important factor it is in the success
-of the picture. The whole thing is touching in the simple
-straightforwardness of statement, and all the details are wrought
-with inimitable but unobtrusive minute precision. In the management
-of tone-values and of indoors atmosphere Jan proves himself in this
-picture far ahead of his time.
-
-The signature of this Arnolfini picture is written in ornamental
-Gothic characters immediately above the mirror, and takes the
-extraordinary form "Johannes de Eyck fuit hic" (Jan van Eyck was
-here), with the date 1434. Owing to this ambiguous wording, which
-may {57} be, and has been, interpreted as "this was Jan van Eyck,"
-the picture was formerly held to represent the artist himself and his
-wife, a theory which still has its defenders. A full pedigree of the
-picture is given in the National Gallery catalogue. It belonged in
-1516 to Margaret of Austria, to whom it was given by Don Diego de
-Guevara, whose arms were painted on the shutters which were
-originally attached to it. Afterwards it passed into the hands of a
-barber-surgeon at Bruges, who presented it to the then Regent of the
-Netherlands, Mary, the sister of Charles V., and Queen Dowager of
-Hungary. This Princess valued the picture so highly that she granted
-the barber-surgeon in return a pension, or office, worth 100 florins
-per annum. The picture is included in the list of valuables which
-she carried with her to Spain in 1556, from which date it disappeared
-until 1815, when it was discovered by Major-General Hay in the
-apartments to which he was taken, in Brussels, to recover from wounds
-received at Waterloo. He subsequently purchased the picture, and
-disposed of it to the British Government in 1842, since which date it
-has been at the National Gallery. Henri Bouchot was of opinion that
-the picture is not {58} the one of Arnolfini the traces of which are
-lost in 1556, but a portrait of van Eyck and his wife, painted as a
-pendant to the lost Arnolfini group. To support his view he pointed
-out the resemblance of the woman in this picture with the portrait of
-Jan's wife at the Bruges Museum.
-
-* * * * *
-
-
-[Illustration: PORTRAIT OF TIMOTHY. BY JAN VAN EYCK.]
-
-The portrait at the National Gallery which, from the name inscribed
-in Greek characters on the stone parapet that extends across the
-bottom of the panel, is known as the bust of Timothy, bears the date
-October 10, 1432, and is therefore the earliest of Jan's signed and
-dated pictures--always excepting the much-overpainted Chatsworth
-panel of 1421. It is not in quite so good a state of preservation as
-the other portrait of a man by Jan, in the same Gallery, which is
-dated 1433, but the face itself is in fairly good condition. The
-features are broad and massive, and inclined to heaviness; the eyes
-are somewhat deep-set, while the cheek-bones are prominent. His
-right hand holds a small roll of parchment with some writing upon it.
-On the parapet, beneath the Greek word "Tymotheos," is the
-inscription LEAL SOVVENIR, and the signature {59} "Factū
-año. D(m-macron). 1432. 10. die Octobris. a Joh. de Eyck."
-
-* * * * *
-
-The portrait known as _The Man with the Pinks_ at the Berlin Museum,
-is one of the most characteristic of Jan's portraits. It shows an
-elderly man in a dark grey coat with fur cuffs and collar and a
-broad-brimmed beaver hat. At the neck the brocade collar of a tunic
-shows above the fur collar of the coat. The ornament of this brocade
-seems to consist of the alternating letters Y and C, which occur in
-one or two other portraits of the period, and may eventually afford
-some clue as to the identity of the sitter. Round the neck is a
-twisted wire chain, from which hangs a headless cross and the bell of
-St. Anthony. Both hands are raised as high as the breast, the
-fingers and thumb of the left holding three pinks. A handsome ring
-with two stones is on the third finger. The face, wrinkled and
-lined, is full of expression and life; the lips are parted, as though
-about to give utterance to speech. Though the drawing is almost hard
-in its exact delineation, it is far from rigid. It is altogether an
-admirable example of Jan's lifelike realism, that loves to dwell on
-every little ugly {60} detail--ill-shapen ears, puffy "tear-bags,"
-warts and wrinkles--and yet infuses the whole thing with the beauty
-of life and character.
-
-* * * * *
-
-[Illustration: THE VAN DER PAELE ALTAR-PIECE. BY JAN VAN EYCK.]
-
-The _Virgin and Child, with St. Donatian, St. George, and the Donor,
-George van der Paele_, Canon of the ancient Cathedral of St. Donatian
-at Bruges, bears the date 1436, and is the most important of Jan van
-Eyck's religious compositions. The scene is in the circular apse of
-a Romanesque church, lighted by the soft rays that filter through the
-leaded windows. The Virgin, draped in a red cloak, is seen in the
-centre under a green canopy, holding the Christ-Child in her lap.
-She has the same heavy, matronly features as the Virgin of _The
-Annunciation_ in St. Petersburg and of the Chancellor Rolin picture
-in Paris, and is no more idealised than the by no means attractive
-infant Saviour, who is playing with a parrot. It is all very human
-and wonderfully true, and for that very reason lacking in spiritual
-significance. On the left stands St. Donatian in a gorgeous and
-marvellously painted brocade robe, whilst on the right St. George, in
-armour, presents the kneeling Canon van der Paele to the Virgin. The
-patron saint, again, {61} is obviously painted from a model of low
-rank in life--perhaps a peasant or a stableman; whilst the rugged
-irregular features of the donor are set down with an honest and
-painstaking straightforwardness that seems to delight in doing full
-justice to all the sitter's ugliness. As objective portraiture pure
-and simple, this head of van der Paele has probably never been
-surpassed in the whole history of art. The supreme mastery of Jan
-van Eyck manifests itself in the creation of a work of unforgettable
-beauty and sumptuous splendour from such unpromising material. The
-ugliness of the types chosen is forgotten when one's eyes revel in
-the rich scheme of colour, the extraordinary beauty of the painting
-of all the stuffs and accessories, the perfect modelling of the
-features, and, above all, the (for the time) amazing knowledge of the
-effect of light. With all the richness of pigment there is not a
-single note in this whole large panel that is not absolutely "in
-tone"; nothing is forced, nothing arbitrary, as though the
-fifteenth-century master had already adopted the principle of the
-nineteenth-century impressionists--"the first subject of a picture is
-light."
-
-The van der Paele altar-piece was in the sacristy of the church of
-St. Donatian when {62} the old basilica was destroyed by the
-revolutionary troops. It was taken to Paris, together with much
-other artistic booty, but was returned to Bruges in 1814, and is now
-in the Museum of the Academy of that city. The drapery round the
-loins of the infant Saviour is a later addition which does not appear
-in the excellent early copy at the Antwerp Museum, from which our
-illustration is a reproduction. The original at Bruges bears the
-inscription in small Gothic letters: _Hoc opus fecit fieri magister
-Georgius de Pala, huius ecclesie canonicus, per Johannem de Eyck
-pictorem. Et fundavit hic duas capellanias de gremio chori domini M.
-ccc°. xxxiiij°., completing anno_ 1436°.
-
-* * * * *
-
-At the Museum of Antwerp is the exquisite unfinished little painting
-of _St. Barbara_, signed and dated: JOHES DE EYCK ME FECIT 1437. The
-saint, with an open book on her lap and a palm-branch in her hand, is
-seated in front of an elaborately designed Gothic tower in course of
-construction. Around the tower are numerous figures of labourers,
-masons, horsemen, and others; and the background shows a landscape
-with mountains, castles, rivers, fields and trees, and a town on a
-hill. Technically, this picture {63} is supremely interesting, as it
-shows that at a comparatively late period of his life--a quarter of a
-century after the reputed discovery of oil-painting--Jan has not
-altogether discarded the practice of tempera-painting. For the whole
-composition, the pensive-looking saint and the widespread angular
-folds of her garment, the tower and the figures, are carefully drawn
-and shaded in brown tempera colour on a preparation of gum or white
-of egg. Only the part which required no special design, the sky, is
-painted in oil-colour. It may thus be assumed that it was the
-practice of the brothers van Eyck to work with oil-colours on a
-tempera foundation.
-
-The _St. Barbara_ also confirms Karel van Mander's statement that
-Jan's sketches were more complete and more carefully wrought than the
-finished paintings of other artists. M. Henri Hymaus suggests that
-this _St. Barbara_ is the very painting which van Mander mentions as
-being in the possession of his master Lucas de Heere at Ghent, and
-"representing a woman behind whom was a landscape; it was but a
-preparation, and yet extraordinarily beautiful."
-
-* * * * *
-
-{64}
-
-Our last illustration represents, or is supposed to represent, _The
-Enthronement of Thomas à Becket as Archbishop of Canterbury_, and is
-in the possession of the Duke of Devonshire, at Chatsworth. In a
-late Norman church Thomas à Becket is seen in the foreground under a
-scarlet canopy, with the Holy Ghost hovering near, and above is a
-splendid crown in which the figure of the risen Christ is introduced;
-above the crown is a circle with a Virgin and Child. Three Bishops
-are engaged in placing the mitre upon the head of the saint, while a
-priest with an open book is kneeling before him. On the right are
-the clergy and on the left the laity, with King Henry II. at their
-head. On the border is the inscription: _Johes de Eyck, fecit, ano,
-M°.CCCCZI, 30° Octobris_. This inscription, if genuine, is the only
-evidence of Jan's authorship of the picture which has been entirely
-repainted, so that nothing of the original work is to be seen. The
-date, 1421, is eleven years earlier than any other dated picture by
-Jan van Eyck. It is scarcely necessary to point out the importance
-of this fact to the art historian in search of evidence of Jan's
-early activity; but whilst the picture remains in its present
-condition it cannot throw {65} any light upon the debated points.
-Only if the surface paint were removed would it be possible to judge
-whether below it is a real early work of Jan van Eyck, and what was
-the relative position of the two brothers before Hubert's death.
-
-_The Enthronement of Thomas à Becket_ has an interesting pedigree.
-It was given by John, Duke of Bedford, to King Henry V., and was
-afterwards in the collection of the second Earl of Arundel, who died
-at Padua in 1646, bequeathing it to Henry, the sixth Duke of Norfolk,
-by whose son, the seventh Duke, it was sold. It came through the
-Duke's steward, Mr. Fox, to a Mr. Sykes, who sold it to the Duke of
-Devonshire in 1722.
-
-
-
-
-{66}
-
- LIST OF WORKS,
- CATALOGUED ACCORDING TO
- LOCALITY
-
-
-AUSTRIA-HUNGARY.
-
-VIENNA MUSEUM.--Portrait of _Jan de Leeuw_ (Jan), signed and dated
-1436.
-
-Portrait of _Nicolas Albergati_, Cardinal of the Church of the Holy
-Cross (Jan), painted, probably, in 1431, when the Cardinal passed
-through Flanders on a political mission. This picture is mentioned
-in the inventory of the Archduke Leopold William, Governor of the
-Netherlands, 1655. A silver-point sketch for the portrait is in the
-Dresden Print Cabinet.
-
-
-BELGIUM.
-
-GHENT, CATHEDRAL OF ST. BAVO.--The _Adoration of the Lamb_ triptych
-(Hubert and Jan; see p. 46).
-
-{67}
-
-ANTWERP MUSEUM.--_St. Barbara_ (Jan), 1437 (see p. 62).
-
-_The Virgin and Child by the Fountain_ (Jan), 1439.
-
-BRUGES MUSEUM.--_Virgin and Child, with St. Donatian, St. George, and
-the Donor, George van der Paele_ (Jan), 1436 (see p. 60).
-
-Portrait of Jan Van Eyck's Wife (Jan), 1439.
-
-BRUSSELS MUSEUM.--_Adam and Eve_: shutters from the _Adoration_
-triptych at St. Bavo, Ghent (Jan; see p. 52).
-
-LOUVAIN, M. G. HELLEPUTTE.--Triptych of the _Virgin and Child, with
-the Donor, Nicolas de Maelbeke, in Adoration_, unfinished (Jan),
-1340. The shutters contain representations of Gideon standing before
-an angel, the burning bush, Aaron with a blossoming rod, and other
-subjects from the Old Testament.
-
-
-BRITISH ISLES.
-
-CHATSWORTH, DUKE OF DEVONSHIRE.--_The Enthronement of Thomas à
-Becket_ (Jan (?); see p. 64).
-
-{68}
-
-INCE HALL, MR. WELD BLUNDELL.--_Virgin and Child_ (Jan): a panel of
-very small dimensions and miniature-like execution, painted in 1432,
-and inscribed _Als ikh kan_ (As well as I can).
-
-LONDON, NATIONAL GALLERY.--_Jan Arnolfini and Jeanne de Chenany, his
-Wife_ (Jan), 1434 (see p. 54).
-
-Portrait of _Timothy_, "Leal Souvenir" (Jan), 1432 (see p. 58).
-
-Portrait of a _Man with a Chaperon or Turban_ (Jan), 1433. Inscribed
-on the frame: _Johes de Eyck me fecit anno_ MCCCC 33 21 _Octobris_,
-and _Als ikh kan_. Formerly in the Arundel Collection.
-
-RICHMOND, SIR FREDERICK COOK.--_The Three Marys at the Sepulchre_
-(variously attributed to Hubert and Jan).
-
-
-DENMARK.
-
-COPENHAGEN, ROYAL GALLERY. _Robert Poortier, protected by St.
-Antony_ (Hubert).
-
-{69}
-
-FRANCE.
-
-PARIS, LOUVRE.--_Chancellor Rolin kneeling before the Virgin and
-Child_, with a river landscape seen through a loggia of three arches
-(generally ascribed to Hubert, but more probably by Jan).
-
-BARON G. DE ROTHSCHILD.--_Virgin and Child, with St. Anne, St.
-Barbara, and a Carthusian Monk_, who has been identified as Herman
-Steenken, of Suutdorp, Vicar of a Carthusian Nunnery near Bruges
-(Hubert and Jan).
-
-
-GERMANY.
-
-BERLIN, NATIONAL GALLERY.--Six shutters from the _Adoration_
-altar-piece of St. Bavo, Ghent (Hubert and Jan; see p. 48).
-
-A replica of the _Virgin and Child, with a Carthusian Monk_, in the
-collection of Baron G. de Rothschild, Paris.
-
-_Head of Christ_ (Jan), 1439.
-
-Portrait of a _Knight of the Golden Fleece_, probably Baudouin de
-Lannoy (Jan).
-
-The Man with the Pinks (Jan; see p. 59).
-
-{70}
-
-DRESDEN GALLERY.--Triptych, _The Virgin and Child Enthroned_. On the
-wings are the figures of St. Catherine and the donor, and on the back
-of the shutters the Annunciation (Jan).
-
-FRANKFORT, STAEDEL INSTITUTE.--_The Virgin and Child Enthroned_ (Jan).
-
-LEIPZIG MUSEUM.--_Portrait of a Man_ (Jan?).
-
-
-ITALY.
-
-TURIN GALLERY.--Copy of _St. Francis receiving the Stigmata_. The
-original is in the collection of Mr. J. G. Johnston, Philadelphia.
-
-
-RUSSIA.
-
-ST. PETERSBURG, HERMITAGE.--_Calvary and the Last Judgment_. Wings
-of a triptych, the centre portion of which is lost (Hubert?).
-
-_The Annunciation_ (Jan), formerly in the collection of King William
-II. of Holland. Bought for the Hermitage Collection for 13,000
-francs.
-
-{71}
-
-SPAIN.
-
-MADRID GALLERY.--Copy of a lost painting by Hubert and Jan van Eyck,
-representing _The Triumph of the Church over the Synagogue_, also
-known as _The Fountain of Life_.
-
-
-UNITED STATES.
-
-PHILADELPHIA, J. G. JOHNSTON.--_St. Francis receiving the Stigmata_
-(Hubert and Jan). A copy of this picture is at the Turin Gallery.
-
-
-
-BILLING AND SONS, LTD., PRINTERS, GUILDFORD.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BROTHERS VAN EYCK ***
-
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-be renamed.
-
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-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The brothers Van Eyck, by P. G. Konody</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
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-</div>
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-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The brothers Van Eyck</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: P. G. Konody</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: November 6, 2022 [eBook #69306]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Al Haines</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BROTHERS VAN EYCK ***</div>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-front"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-front.jpg" alt="JAN ARNOLFINI AND JEANNE DE CHENANY. BY JAN VAN EYCK.">
-<br>
-JAN ARNOLFINI AND JEANNE DE CHENANY.<br>
-BY JAN VAN EYCK.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- Bell's Miniature Series of Painters<br>
-</p>
-
-<h1>
-<br><br>
- THE BROTHERS<br>
- VAN EYCK<br>
-</h1>
-
-<p class="t3">
- BY<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="t2">
- P. G. KONODY<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- LONDON<br>
- GEORGE BELL & SONS<br>
- 1907<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-TABLE OF CONTENTS
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#chap01">THE TIMES OF THE BROTHERS VAN EYCK</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#chap02">HUBERT VAN EYCK</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#chap03">JAN VAN EYCK</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#chap04">THE INVENTION OF OIL-PAINTING</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#chap05">THE ART OF THE VAN EYCKS</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#chap06">COLLABORATION OF THE BROTHERS</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#chap07">OUR ILLUSTRATIONS</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#chap08">LIST OF WORKS, CATALOGUED ACCORDING TO LOCALITY</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-front">JAN ARNOLFINI AND JEANNE DE CHENANY</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; (<i>National Gallery</i>) - - - <i>Frontispiece</i><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; By Jan van Eyck.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-008">THE ADORATION OF THE LAMB</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; (<i>Cathedral of St. Bavo, Ghent</i>)<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; By Hubert and Jan van Eyck.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-014">THE ENTHRONEMENT OF THOMAS À BECKET</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; (<i>Chatsworth</i>)<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; By Jan van Eyck.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-028">THE MAN WITH THE PINKS</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; (<i>Berlin Museum</i>)<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; By Jan van Eyck.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-040">ST. BARBARA</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; (<i>Antwerp Museum</i>)<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; By Jan van Eyck.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-050">THE JUST JUDGES, AND CHRIST'S WARRIORS</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; (<i>Berlin Museum</i>)<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; By Hubert and Jan van Eyck.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-058">PORTRAIT OF TIMOTHY</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; (<i>National Gallery</i>)<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; By Jan van Eyck.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-060">THE VAN DER PAELE ALTAR-PIECE</a><br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; (<i>Bruges Museum</i>)<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; By Jan van Eyck.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap01"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P1"></a>1}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-THE TIMES OF THE BROTHERS VAN EYCK
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The unusual activity which during the latter
-half of the fourteenth and the first half of
-the fifteenth centuries throbbed throughout the
-whole of the Netherlands forms one of the most
-interesting and surprising studies of national
-progress that history has furnished.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Geographically and politically, in her arts
-and in her industries, the country was affected
-by changes both radical and lasting. Some
-years before the period which embraces the
-life of the subjects of this biographical sketch,
-the German Ocean had invaded the northern
-territory of the Netherlands, and had
-disorganised a Parliament and divided a people.
-At the beginning of the thirteenth century over
-the whole of that low-lying and marshy tract
-between Kampen on the east and Amsterdam
-to westward, and southward to within sight of
-Nieukerk, the North Sea swept in upon the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P2"></a>2}</span>
-inland lake of Flevo, swallowing thousands of
-hamlets, villages, and towns suddenly and
-completely. Until this time there had been but
-one Friesland, including Holland, divided only
-by the Vlie, a small stream hardly to be
-counted a river. Now East Friesland and
-West Friesland were divided by this vast
-stretch of water, the stormy and dangerous
-Zuyderzee, and it became impossible for
-Holland to send her representatives to the
-general assemblies at Aurich. West Friesland
-was absorbed by Holland, and East Friesland
-became a self-governing State, and remained
-such until the power of Charles V. was
-established. Thus politically as well as
-geographically was the country disrupted by the
-forces of Nature.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To trace the rise of the Netherlands as a
-European Power from a more remote period
-than the beginning of the fourteenth century
-would be beyond the range of this sketch; but
-for the purpose of showing the general advance
-of the country's interests a brief summary of
-the events culminating in the wellnigh despotic
-power of the House of Burgundy may refresh
-the reader's mind, as they affect the constitution
-of the nation, and may serve to point cause
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P3"></a>3}</span>
-and effect in the increasing prosperity of the
-country and in the resulting advance of art;
-for just as the political influence of the
-Burgundian Princes spread from their hereditary
-provinces first over Flanders and Brabant&mdash;over
-that part of the Netherlands which is now
-known as Belgium&mdash;and finally over the Dutch
-provinces, so the current of art swept from
-Burgundy to Flanders and thence to Holland.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At the beginning of the fourteenth century
-Holland was ruled by the House of Avennes,
-Counts of Hainault. Holland having previous
-to the accession of the Avennes annexed
-Zeeland, the three provinces may almost be
-regarded as the nucleus of the Dutch power.
-William IV., last of the Hainault line, died
-childless in 1355. His death was the signal
-for the outbreak of a long and spasmodic series
-of civil disturbances between the nobles and
-the cities and municipalities. These parties,
-known by the titles of the Hooks and the
-Kabblejaus (codfish), continued their intermittent
-strife throughout the succeeding 150 years.
-In the meantime William IV. was succeeded
-by William of Bavaria. Then followed his
-brother Albert, who was in turn succeeded by
-his son William VI. At the death of the latter
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P4"></a>4}</span>
-the reins of government were left in the
-uncertain hands of his young daughter, Jacqueline,
-a girl of seventeen. Jacqueline, it appears, led
-anything but a happy life. Her cousin, Philip
-the Good, Duke of Burgundy, for thirteen
-years plundered and robbed her, and at her
-death in 1437 he had already dispossessed her
-of her lands and reduced her from the position
-of Sovereign to that of Lady Forester in her
-own provinces, whilst for himself he had laid the
-foundation of that Greater Netherlands which
-by conquest and annexation he proceeded to
-extend.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Having acquired the principal Netherlands
-and inherited the two Burgundies and the
-counties of Flanders and Artois, he had
-purchased the county of Namur, usurped the
-duchy of Brabant, and annexed the barony of
-Mechlin. A few years later he acquired also
-the duchy of Luxembourg.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Philip was now the ruler of what may be
-termed a kingdom of several peoples, who,
-though in a measure distinct, were of similar
-temperament and character, and who may be
-counted now as one. Never has conqueror
-been in a happier position when faced with the
-problem of welding together his conquests.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P5"></a>5}</span>
-For Philip ruled those whose interests were
-similar, and whose characteristics were almost
-identical&mdash;a people born of the sea, strong and
-fearless, who had lived by strife with their
-fellows and by strife with Nature; a people
-born to toil and to hardship, whose battle for
-life had been with Nature herself&mdash;a race which
-for centuries had fought with swamp and water
-year in, year out, conquering a mile of morass
-or patch of barren furze, striving for the soil to
-live upon, working not for gold, but for life.
-This nation had now become a power of
-natural strength and of dominating physique,
-virile and live and expansive, whose sons, with
-brooms at their mastheads, should later sweep
-the seas from whose destructive embrace she
-had succeeded in wresting herself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Under the rule of the Burgundian the
-prosperity of the Netherlands rapidly increased.
-In Holland and in Flanders, in Brabant and
-in the other leading provinces, industry and
-wealth, agriculture, commerce, and manufactures,
-were ever augmenting. While Philip, in
-the zenith of his power, flushed with the
-passion and success of territorial acquisition,
-busied himself with the glorification of his
-sovereignty by founding at Bruges, amid a
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P6"></a>6}</span>
-scene of indescribable splendour, the Order of
-the Golden Fleece, "to the honour of God, of
-the Blessed Virgin, and of the holy Andrew,"
-a principle more potent than even territorial
-power was evolving. For in Haarlem an
-undistinguished sexton wrestled with the
-intricacies of the printing-press. Lorenz Coster
-was printing his book of the Dutch language.
-The question as to the time and place of the
-invention of printing will probably never be
-settled to the satisfaction of Holland and
-Germany; but the men of Haarlem still claim
-upon very sound and substantial evidence that
-between 1423 and 1440 their citizen was the first
-to employ movable type, which is generally
-considered the invention of printing proper, as
-distinguished from the more ancient block-printing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whatever objection may be legitimately
-raised to the application of the title "The
-Good" to a ruler of Philip's character, this
-Burgundian had many of the qualities that go
-to the making of a successful monarch. His
-military talents were considerable; his political
-methods, though despotic, were practicable.
-Though he taxed the wealth of his country, he
-protected and encouraged the commerce and
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P7"></a>7}</span>
-manufactures of Holland and Flanders, their
-arts and crafts, science and literature. He
-founded at Bruges the famous Burgundian
-Library. He remodelled, and to some extent
-endowed, the University of Louvain. His
-munificence and princely generosity attracted
-to his Court at Bruges men of letters like
-Oliver de la Marche and Philippe de Commines,
-and famous painters like Jan van Eyck,
-and perhaps, though we lack documentary
-evidence, his elder brother Hubert, who gave,
-perhaps, more to the art of painting than even
-did Coster to the art of printing, or Philip
-himself to the sciences of statesmanship and war.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The most salient points in the life and work
-of these two brothers, who close the period
-of stiff Gothic medievalism and stand on the
-threshold of modern art, and whose improvements
-in the technical methods of their art
-opened up to their successors unthought-of
-possibilities, are shrouded in deep mystery, and
-the most recent research to which a number of
-thoroughly competent scientific experts have
-devoted themselves, whilst producing many
-ingenious theories and deductions, has, in a
-certain sense, added to the confusion by throwing
-doubt upon the authenticity of documents
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P8"></a>8}</span>
-and inscriptions which had formerly passed
-undisputed, and formed the basis of the
-unstable edifice that had been erected around the
-vague fame of the brothers Van Eyck. This
-uncertainty begins with the parentage and the
-place and date of birth of the two masters,
-and extends to the two supreme achievements
-to which they owe their fame&mdash;the reputed
-invention of oil-painting, which was variously
-ascribed to Hubert and Jan, then denied to
-both of them, and, finally, given back to
-Hubert in the form of an improvement on the
-methods of oil-painting practised during the
-period; and the much-quoted inscription on the
-famous Ghent altar-piece, <i>The Adoration of the
-Lamb</i>, which has been, and must remain, the
-starting-point for all research in this matter,
-even though the late Henri Bouchot, Keeper
-of the Print Cabinet of the Bibliothèque
-Nationale, suggests that this inscription may
-have been added when the picture was restored
-in the middle of the sixteenth century.
-At every turn we are faced by similar doubts
-and contradictions, especially in the case of
-Hubert, about whose life and doings we have so
-little documentary evidence that we have to fall
-back entirely upon conjecture and deduction.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-008"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-008.jpg" alt="THE ADORATION OF THE LAMB. BY HUBERT AND JAN VAN EYCK.">
-<br>
-THE ADORATION OF THE LAMB. <br>
-BY HUBERT AND JAN VAN EYCK.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap02"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P9"></a>9}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-HUBERT VAN EYCK
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-If Joes van Eyck and Margaret van den
-Huntfanghe, who are entered in the register
-of the Ghent Guild of Painters for 1391, are the
-parents of the two masters who have made the
-name of Van Eyck immortal, we should have
-proof of their descent from artistic stock, which
-may be taken for granted in view of the fact
-that not only Hubert and Jan, but also a third
-brother, Lambert, and a sister, Margaret,
-devoted themselves to the art of painting, though
-Lambert&mdash;if he really be responsible for the
-pictures which stand to his credit&mdash;was a man
-of but mediocre talent; whilst we have no
-evidence of the activity of Margaret, who was
-most probably a miniaturist or illuminator.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is believed that Hubert (or Huybrecht)
-van Eyck was born at Maaseyck, or perhaps
-at the village of Eyck near that town, between
-1366 and 1370, and that he received his artistic
-training either at Cologne or at Maastricht;
-but the first definite mention we have of him
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P10"></a>10}</span>
-is in Ghent, where he eventually settled, and
-where, in 1424, the archives record that he was
-paid certain sums for drawings. Though Mr. Weale
-and other authorities hold the view that,
-before settling in Ghent, Hubert must have
-travelled to the South of Europe, there is
-absolutely no evidence to this effect. The paintings
-of the two brothers certainly contain details
-which reveal intimate acquaintance with
-Southern vegetation and mountain formation;
-but, as will be seen later, Mr. Alfred Marks
-has fairly well established the fact that the
-younger brother, Jan, must be held responsible
-for such paintings or portions of paintings as
-prove the knowledge of Nature in the South of
-Europe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The name of Hubert van Eyck occurs in
-two other documents, quoted by Edmond de
-Busscher in his "Recherches sur les Peintres
-Gantois," but the authenticity of both these
-entries has lately been questioned. The first
-of them, which is proved to be a forgery, records
-the admission of Hubert and of his sister,
-Margaret, into the Confraternity of Our Lady
-of the Rays at Ghent in 1419; the other the
-affiliation of Hubert and Jan, in 1421, to the
-Corporation of Painters and Sculptors of Ghent.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P11"></a>11}</span>
-According to the wording of the latter entry, it
-may be gathered that the election of the two
-masters was so enthusiastic and unanimous
-that the Corporation dispensed with the
-conditions and formalities usual on the admission
-of free masters to the guild. This unusual
-affiliation, of which the <i>Livre du Métier
-Gantois</i> does not reveal another example, is
-there quoted as a homage rendered to the
-memory of Michelle de France, Countess of
-Flanders, and first wife of Philip the Good,
-who appears to have held the two brothers in
-special favour. The Corporation, in thus granting
-to them the professional franchise of Ghent,
-at the same time expressed their esteem for
-their talent, and the pious remembrance in
-which they held the memory of their Queen
-Consort.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of Hubert's early work we have absolutely
-no record, and no picture is known which bears
-his signature. Indeed, the only paintings
-which can with absolute certainty be assigned
-to him are the great Ghent altar-piece, painted
-for Jodoc Vydt, on which he was engaged at
-the time of his death, and which was finished
-six years later by his brother Jan; and the
-shutter of a triptych at the Royal Gallery at
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P12"></a>12}</span>
-Copenhagen, which represents Robert Poortier,
-of Ghent, protected by St. Anthony, with the
-Angel Gabriel on the reverse. Robert Poortier's
-will, made in 1426, a few months before
-Hubert's death, mentions this triptych as being
-in the master's workshop. On the internal
-evidence of these two authentic works attempts
-have been made to trace Hubert's hand in
-several other pictures, though their number is
-so far restricted to only seven. It has been
-suggested that Hubert may in the earlier years
-of his career have devoted himself to miniature
-painting; and the wonderful Turin miniatures
-published by M. Paul Durrieu in the <i>Gazette
-des Beaux-Arts</i> (January and February, 1903),
-which date from the same period, show such
-marked kinship with Hubert's conception and
-style that they may well be the work of his
-own hand. The scarcity of his paintings would
-thus be accounted for if, anterior to the
-experiments which led to the invention of the new
-method of oil-painting about 1410, Hubert had
-exercised his rare gifts in a different field.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From the wording of his epitaph, which has
-been handed down to us, it is made clear that
-Hubert died on September 18, 1426. As translated
-by Sir Charles Eastlake, in his "Materials
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P13"></a>13}</span>
-for a History of Oil-Painting," this epitaph
-runs as follows: "Take warning from me, ye
-who walk over me. I was as you are, but am
-now buried dead beneath you. Thus it appears
-that neither art nor medicine availed me. Art,
-honour, wisdom, power, affluence, are not
-spared when death comes. I was called
-Hubert van Eyck; I am now food for worms.
-Formerly known and highly honoured in painting,
-this was all shortly after turned to nothing.
-It was in the year of the Lord one thousand
-four hundred and twenty-six, on the eighteenth
-day of September, that I rendered up my soul
-to God, in sufferings. Pray God for me, ye
-who love art, that I may attain to His sight.
-Flee sin, turn to the best, for you must follow
-me at last." Hubert was buried in the crypt
-of the Cathedral of St. Bavo at Ghent. When,
-owing to some structural alterations to the
-church, this crypt was destroyed, the tombs,
-including Hubert's, were removed and the
-bones dispersed. Only Hubert's right arm
-was placed in an iron case and exhibited as a
-relic.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap03"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P14"></a>14}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-JAN VAN EYCK
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The date of Jan van Eyck's birth is as
-uncertain as that of his brother's. Tradition
-has it that the two brothers are portrayed on the
-panel of the great Ghent altar-piece, which
-represents <i>The Just Judges</i>. These portraits
-suggest a difference of about twenty years
-between the two, so that the birth of Jan would
-have to be placed somewhere between 1386 and
-1390. Hubert being thus about twenty years
-his senior, it is natural to suppose that Jan
-received from him his early education in matters
-of art. Guicciardini, van Mander, and other
-early writers, affirm that the two brothers
-worked in collaboration, and there is no reason
-to doubt that Jan in his early years assisted his
-brother in many or most of his paintings&mdash;perhaps
-even in the Ghent altar-piece, which
-he finished after the elder brother's death. It
-is certainly a curious fact that, with a single
-exception&mdash;the completely over-painted
-<i>Enthronement of St. Thomas of Canterbury</i> at
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P15"></a>15}</span>
-Chatsworth&mdash;all the signed pictures by Jan bear
-dates posterior to the death of Hubert. And
-it is equally significant that the first of this
-series of ten signed pictures is dated 1432, the
-year of the completion of the Ghent altar-piece,
-which was the last work in which both brothers
-had a share.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-014"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-014.jpg" alt="THE ENTHRONEMENT OF THOMAS À BECKET, BY JAN VAN EYCK.">
-<br>
-THE ENTHRONEMENT OF THOMAS À BECKET, <br>
-BY JAN VAN EYCK.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The chief events in the life of Jan van Eyck
-can be gathered fairly accurately from
-contemporary records and documents. In 1422
-Jan entered the service of John of Bavaria, at
-that time Duke of Luxembourg, whose household
-accounts show the payment of a weekly
-wage to the artist, from October 25, 1422, till
-September, 1424, for the decoration of the
-palace at the Hague. M. Bouchot mentioned
-an earlier record of Jan's doings, when he
-believed he discovered him at Cambrai
-decorating a Paschal candle. But the eminent
-French critic probably confused Jan van Eyck
-with one Jan de Yeke, whose name occurs in
-the accounts of the Cathedral of Cambrai as
-that of a man employed in 1422 and many
-following years in painting crosses, clocks, and
-candles on the outer wall of the cathedral to
-deter the passers-by from committing nuisances!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the spring of 1425 Jan van Eyck was
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P16"></a>16}</span>
-appointed <i>varlet de chambre</i> to Philip the Good,
-and though this princely patron availed himself
-of the master's services as a painter, it would
-appear from a letter signed by Philip, and
-bearing the date March 12, 1434, that the
-appointment of Jan to the position of Court
-painter to the Burgundian Prince only took
-place in that year (1434). Still, as <i>varlet de
-chambre</i> Jan van Eyck must have enjoyed a
-position of considerable trust and emolument
-at the hands of his august master, for on more
-than one occasion we find him entrusted with
-important missions, some of which took him
-to the Portuguese Court. The first of these
-excursions took place when he had resided for
-three months at Bruges. On his return he
-went at Philip's order to live at Lille, where
-he remained until 1428. His missions were
-generally of a secret nature, but on one of these
-occasions, in the year 1428, we find Jan again
-absent in Portugal, returning to the Court of
-Philip in the suite of Isabella of Portugal, who
-was destined to become the royal consort.
-Gachard, in the <i>Collection de Documents Inédits
-concevnant l'Histoire de Belgique</i>, gives a detailed
-account of the artist's movements from his
-departure from Écluse on October 19, 1428, to his
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P17"></a>17}</span>
-return in January, 1430. According to these
-dates, which are gathered from contemporary
-documents, the ambassadors with the Infanta set
-out from Lisbon on October 8, 1429. The apparent
-discrepancy between these dates and that
-of January 10, 1429, which, at the Golden Fleece
-Exhibition at Bruges in 1907, was given as the
-date of the foundation of this Order, and
-consequently of the nuptials of Philip and Isabella
-and of Jan's return to Bruges, is easily
-accounted for if we remember that the beginning
-of the year was then reckoned from March 1,
-so that January, 1430, of our own reckoning
-would tally with January, 1429, of the
-contemporary calendar.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jan's first duty on arrival at the Portuguese
-Court was to paint the portrait of the Princess.
-It appears that he was at work upon this
-picture for a month. Several portraits of
-Isabella are still extant painted in the manner
-of the van Eycks, and pointing to the same
-origin, but none has so far been discovered to
-possess qualities or details which would justify
-its identification as Jan's original panel.
-Evidently Jan's portrait was pleasing to the eye of
-the Lowland monarch, for upon Philip expressing
-his satisfaction with the personal appearance
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P18"></a>18}</span>
-of Isabella, the ambassadors and the bride
-immediately embarked on the homeward
-journey. Soon after his return&mdash;namely, in
-1431&mdash;Jan bought a house in Bruges, where he
-married and continued to work, after the
-completion of the Ghent altar-piece in the following
-year, until his death, which took place about
-the end of June, 1441. He was buried in the
-churchyard of St. Donatian at Bruges, but his
-body was subsequently removed to a vault
-near the font of that church.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. Weale, while arranging the archives
-of St. Donatian at Bruges, discovered in the
-account of the fabric of the church for the year
-beginning June 25, 1440, and ending June 24,
-1441, entries of sums received for the grave of
-Jan van Eyck and for the ringing of the funeral
-bell, and in the obituary of the church his
-anniversary set down as celebrated on July 9.
-In an article in the <i>Burlington Magazine</i> (1904)
-Mr. Weale makes the following comment:
-"Hence it appears certain that he died on
-July 9, 1440. This date, now generally
-accepted, is, however, incorrect. Two entries
-in the account of Walter Poulain,
-Receiver-General of Flanders for the year ending
-December 31, 1441, prove that John's death
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P19"></a>19}</span>
-took place in 1441, but leave the exact day
-uncertain." Three entries show that Jan died
-about the end of June, and that on July 22 a
-grant of 360 livres&mdash;the equivalent of her
-husband's salary for half a year&mdash;was made to
-Jan's widow by the Duke Philip in recognition
-of the services rendered by her deceased
-husband. It also shows that Jan's wife was
-named Margaret, and that he left at least two
-children&mdash;one, the Duke's godchild, Philip or
-Philippina, born in June, 1434; the other,
-Lyennie, who became a nun at Maaseyck in
-1449, which lends colour to the theory that
-Maaseyck was her father's birthplace.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His epitaph, as translated by Sir Charles
-Eastlake, runs: "Here lies Joannes, who was
-celebrated for his surpassing skill, and whose
-felicity in painting excited wonder. He painted
-breathing forms, and the earth's surface,
-covered with flowery vegetation, completing
-each work to the life. Hence Phidias and
-Apelles must give place to him, and Polycletus
-be considered his inferior in art. Call,
-therefore, the Fates most cruel, who have snatched
-from us such a man. Yet cease to weep, for
-destiny is immutable; pray only now to God
-that he may live in heaven."
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap04"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P20"></a>20}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-THE INVENTION OF OIL-PAINTING
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Tradition has for centuries connected the
-name of Van Eyck with the invention of
-oil-painting, and has fixed upon the year 1410
-as the date of this invention. This, at least,
-is the year given by such early writers as
-Guicciardini, Vasari, Opmeer, and Karel van
-Mander. Vasari, indeed, gives a most
-detailed and circumstantial account of this
-epoch-making event, which, according to the Aretine
-biographer, was brought about by the single-handed
-efforts of Jan. And it is easy to
-understand that the fame of the elder brother
-had in the sixteenth century become obscured
-and merged in that of the brilliantly successful
-Jan, the <i>varlet de chambre</i> and official Court
-painter. This "Giovanni of Bruggia," Vasari
-tells us, "after having given extreme labour
-to the completion of a certain picture, and with
-great diligence brought it to a successful issue,
-he gave it the varnish and set it to dry in the
-sun, as is the custom. But whether because
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P21"></a>21}</span>
-the heat was too violent, or that the wood was
-badly joined or insufficiently seasoned, the
-picture gave way at the joinings, opening
-in a very deplorable manner. Thereupon
-Giovanni, perceiving the mischief done to his
-work by the heat of the sun, determined to
-proceed in such a manner that the same thing
-should never again injure his work in like
-manner. And as he was no less embarrassed
-by his varnishes than by the process of
-tempera-painting, he turned his thoughts to the
-discovery of some sort of varnish that would dry
-in the shadow, to the end that he need not
-expose his pictures to the sun. Accordingly,
-after having made many experiments on
-substances, pure and mixed, he finally discovered
-that linseed oil and oil of nuts dried more
-readily than any others of all that he had tried.
-Having boiled these oils, therefore, with other
-mixtures, he thus obtained the varnish which
-he&mdash;or, rather, all the painters of the world&mdash;had
-so long desired. He made experiments
-with many other substances, but finally
-decided that mixing the colours with these oils
-gave a degree of firmness to the work which
-not only secured it against all injury from
-water when once dried, but also imparted so
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P22"></a>22}</span>
-much life to the colours that they exhibited a
-sufficient lustre in themselves without the aid
-of varnish; and what appeared to him more
-extraordinary than all besides was that the
-colours thus treated were much more easily
-united and blent than when in tempera."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Vasari then proceeds to tell us of Jan's great
-success, of the "blameless envy" of all other
-artists in Flanders and abroad, from whom he
-would jealously guard his secret, until, in his
-old age, he imparted it to "his disciple Ruggieri
-da Bruggia," a name which surely can hide no
-other personality than Rogier van der Weyden's.
-Of Hubert never a mention, save a short
-reference in the last volume, in the chapter on
-"Divers Flemish Artists." As in most of
-Vasari's anecdotes, there is probably a foundation
-of truth to the elaborate network of fiction.
-The incident explained by him at great length
-may have occurred, but its hero can only have
-been Hubert, and not Jan, who was then a
-mere youth working in his brother's <i>bottega</i>,
-and may have assisted Hubert in his
-experiments. Though it has since been doubted that
-Hubert or Jan van Eyck actually invented
-oil-painting, no evidence has yet been discovered
-to prove they were not the first to employ oil
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P23"></a>23}</span>
-as a medium in putting colour on the prepared
-panel. It is true that oil as a protective
-varnish was frequently used during the
-fourteenth century, and it is probable that some
-kind of oil-colour was employed in the colouring
-of statuary and in the painting of banners at
-an early period. For this reason the statement
-that Hubert and Jan van Eyck "discovered
-painting in oils" has been disputed, and
-generally accepted as inaccurate, but the
-question is one rather of terminology than of the
-technical point.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the term "oil-painting" is generally
-accepted to-day, it is fairer to credit these
-brothers with the invention, than to speak of
-their achievement as an improvement in
-oil-painting, for hitherto the medium in common
-use had been a preparation of gum and white
-of eggs. And as there is neither definite proof
-nor any good evidence that oil had ever been used
-as a <i>medium to mix the colours</i> for panel-painting
-before Hubert and Jan made their experiments,
-we surely have an easy distinction to draw.
-The brothers Van Eyck were the first successfully
-to mix the oil with the colours for
-painting, and this process is what we now
-understand as "painting in oils." The use of
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P24"></a>24}</span>
-oils as a protective or varnish does not enter
-into the painting, since such had only been
-used on the completion of the work.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For the rest, the brothers either acted
-more generously than Vasari would have it, or
-they did not altogether succeed in guarding
-their precious secret, for their method appears
-to have been fairly generally practised at
-Ghent about 1420. We find, for instance,
-that in 1419 the "free painters," Willem van
-Appoele and Johannes Maertens, received a
-commission to paint some pictures for the
-town hall of Ghent in "good oil-colours." It
-is also certain that Rogier van der
-Weyden&mdash;Vasari's Ruggieri da Bruggia&mdash;never was a
-pupil of either Jan or Hubert van Eyck.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap05"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P25"></a>25}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-THE ART OF THE VAN EYCKS
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The position occupied by Hubert and Jan
-van Eyck in the history of art is one of
-unparalleled importance. A deep gulf divides
-them from all their immediate precursors, who
-seem to belong altogether to a different
-epoch&mdash;nay, a different world. Just as their
-improvement in the technical methods of their
-craft opened up a vista of till then unthought
-of possibilities, so their conception
-of life and of pictorial form marks the beginning
-of a new era, the passing of the vague
-mediæval idealism into an art that is based
-upon the close study and loving appreciation
-of Nature. Perhaps too much stress has
-been laid upon the so-called "realism" of the
-brothers van Eyck, and more especially of Jan.
-Again and again critics have insisted upon
-Jan's uncompromising love of literal truth,
-upon his insistence on details that are in
-themselves at times repulsively ugly. This realism
-was tempered with deep sentiment and a sense
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P26"></a>26}</span>
-of style which kept such details well subordinated
-to the general scheme, and it is in this
-respect that Jan van Eyck stands immeasurably
-above Melchior Broederlam, who occupied the
-position of <i>varlet de chambre</i> and Court painter
-to Philip the Bold, the grandfather of Jan's
-patron. Broederlam, indeed, as may be seen
-in his famous altar-piece at Dijon, seems to be
-a far more pronounced realist than Jan van
-Eyck, simply because he lacks that sense of
-style and harmony and subordination&mdash;in short,
-that concentration&mdash;which makes us forget the
-realistic detail in the beauty of the complete
-thing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The real precursors of the van Eycks were the
-sculptors who carved the tombs, monuments, and
-reliefs in the churches of Tournai. In these
-we first find the faithful adherence to the facts
-of Nature and the understanding of the subtleties
-of form which in painting appear first in the
-works of the brothers van Eyck, who may
-have also owed much of their knowledge to the
-flourishing school of Flemish miniature-painters,
-if, indeed, Hubert in his early days did not
-actually practise this art. Yet, even though
-the new era in painting is, as it were, heralded
-by the new tendencies in plastic art&mdash;just as in
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P27"></a>27}</span>
-Italy Giotto was preceded by the sculptor Niccolo
-Pisani&mdash;there is something wonderful, something
-almost difficult to realise, in the sudden
-appearance of complete and perfect works of
-art, like the paintings of the van Eycks, that
-with masterly sureness express the whole
-essence of the Gothic style, whilst at the same
-time they reveal a new understanding of the
-inexhaustible beauty of Nature, a keen perception
-of structural growth and of individual
-characteristics, and, above all, an almost modern
-understanding of the play of light upon figures
-and objects in and out of doors.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The picturesque, brilliant, varied life of such
-cities as Bruges and Ghent at the beginning of
-the fifteenth century cannot have failed to
-stimulate the artists' power of observation, to
-sharpen their perception of the differences of
-race, gesture, and costume; for the streets and
-squares of the rich commercial centres of
-Flanders were filled from morning to night
-with ever-moving crowds of courtiers and
-merchants from all parts of the world&mdash;Spaniards
-and Italians, Germans, and Slavonians, and
-even Moors and Turks, all in their different
-costumes and following their different customs.
-At the same time the painters' eyes were
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P28"></a>28}</span>
-constantly met by the wonders of the creations of
-architects, armourers, and other craftsmen who
-flourished under the protection of the
-Burgundian rulers; and one may well understand the
-love and enthusiasm with which a receptive
-artist like Jan van Eyck applied himself to the
-faithful delineation of the splendours and of the
-seething life by which he was surrounded.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Although the two brothers were in the habit
-of working together upon the same pictures,
-which has given rise to many disputes as to the
-authorship of unsigned works, and although
-Jan, the realist, at times approached, though
-never equalled, the spirituality and decorative
-sumptuousness of Hubert, whilst Hubert,
-the stylist and greater mind of the two,
-sometimes vied with Jan in the minute and
-exquisite elaboration of details, the signed works
-of Jan and those parts of the Ghent altar-piece
-which are unquestionably Hubert's own have
-made it possible to characterise the distinguishing
-qualities of the two masters. Hubert far
-exceeds his brother in monumental impressiveness,
-in grandeur of style, in idealistic significance,
-in sumptuousness, and even in sense of
-beauty. Even the folds of his draperies have a
-fulness and a noble swing which form a striking
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P29"></a>29}</span>
-contrast to the more laboured irregularity of
-Jan's, as may be seen in comparing the
-garments of God the Father, the Virgin Mary, and
-St. John, of the Ghent altar-piece, with the
-curiously broken folds of Barbara's dress in
-Jan's picture at Antwerp.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-028"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-028.jpg" alt="THE MAN WITH THE PINKS. BY JAN VAN EYCK.">
-<br>
-THE MAN WITH THE PINKS. <br>
-BY JAN VAN EYCK.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The conception of such ideas as are embodied
-in the <i>Adoration of the Lamb</i>, or in the
-<i>Triumph of the Church over the Synagogue</i>, at the
-Madrid Museum, would also have been quite
-beyond the pale of the more prosaic Jan's
-imagination. Jan, on the other hand, excelled
-in stating the reality of the visible world.
-Generalisations of human types or of landscape
-features are unknown to him. He was the
-first to fix upon his panels all the carefully
-studied and exquisitely wrought details of the
-actual world&mdash;sky and mountain and river, forest
-and fields, flowers and trees, and the churches
-and castles, houses and bridges, placed in
-Nature by human hands. It is scarcely too
-much to say that he was the first landscape-painter,
-just as he was the first portrait painter
-in the modern sense of the word&mdash;the first
-who could paint a scene so that it could be
-identified after the lapse of centuries, the first
-who could paint a portrait so that the model
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P30"></a>30}</span>
-stands before us living and breathing, in all his
-beauty or ugliness. To appreciate the keenness
-of his vision one has only to examine the
-marvellous Arnolfini group at the National Gallery,
-with its almost scientific treatment of softly
-diffused indoor light. A comparison of this
-picture, from the point of view of lighting, with
-anything that was painted before the days of
-the van Eycks will reveal perhaps the greatest
-step forward that is on record in the whole
-history of painting.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap06"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P31"></a>31}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-COLLABORATION OF THE BROTHERS
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-When piecing together the lives of the
-brothers van Eyck, it is necessary to
-delve into a confusing mass of conflicting
-statements&mdash;evidence which is only in part to be
-relied upon, and the theories of those who have
-devoted a vast amount of time and labour to
-the unearthing, sorting, and arranging of such
-evidence as they have been able to lay their
-hands upon. Incomplete as the records are,
-we must, until further evidence has been
-discovered, accept the obvious conclusions from
-the indisputable data left to us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We have ten unquestionably genuine signed
-pictures by Jan, and a small group of others
-which may, from internal evidence, be safely
-ascribed to the same source. We know that
-the great <i>Adoration of the Lamb</i>, though
-designed in its entirety by Hubert, is the
-combined work of the two masters. We know also
-that the Copenhagen panel of Robert Poortier
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P32"></a>32}</span>
-was in Hubert's studio at the time of his
-death&mdash;perhaps unfinished. The remaining pictures
-generally accepted as genuine van Eycks
-have been variously ascribed to Hubert, or to
-Jan, or to their united efforts. In view of
-the fact that not a single really authenticated
-work by Hubert alone is known, special significance
-must be attached to a statement, several
-times repeated by early writers, that Hubert
-and Jan "continually painted on the same
-works."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In trying to solve the difficult question which
-part of the extant <i>oeuvre</i> is Hubert's and which
-is Jan's, our knowledge of Jan's journeys to the
-South assumes considerable importance. For
-Hubert's travels we lack proof&mdash;they are mere
-conjecture. But there is documentary evidence
-of Jan's journey to Portugal in 1428, in
-addition to which Mr. Weale has, I understand,
-recently unearthed some further documents
-which establish another and earlier journey of
-Jan to Spain. On these travels Jan must have
-become well acquainted with certain plants
-peculiar to the South, and especially the dwarf
-palm or palmetto, which is confined almost
-exclusively to Spain and Portugal. It is
-therefore not unreasonable to assign to him those
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P33"></a>33}</span>
-portions of the disputed pictures in which this
-palmetto appears. Some authorities hold that
-Jan did not have any independent artistic career
-before Hubert's death, and that in the division
-of labour Hubert's share was, as a rule, the
-general design and the painting of the figures,
-whilst Jan filled in the landscape and
-architectural backgrounds.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The collaboration theory has been advanced
-by Mr. A. Marks, whose knowledge of Flemish
-art is profound, and whose deductions are as
-conscientious as they are convincing. To him
-we are indebted for an interesting paper upon
-the subject, which is at once exhaustive and
-reasonable. To retail all that Mr. Marks
-advances in support of his theory would be to
-reprint his treatise <i>in toto</i>; but though it is
-impossible here to follow all his arguments,
-it is equally impossible to avoid reference to the
-valuable correspondence between him and
-Mr. James Weale in the <i>Athenæum</i>, between
-November, 1902, and April, 1903. This
-correspondence arose from an article by
-Mr. A. Marks in the <i>Athenæum</i> in May, 1900, in
-which attention is drawn to the presence of the
-palmetto in the picture of <i>St. Francis receiving
-the Stigmata</i> (now in possession of
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P34"></a>34}</span>
-Mr. J. G. Johnson, Pennsylvania; a copy in Turin),
-which picture had been formerly variously
-ascribed to Henri met de Bles, Joachim Patinier,
-and Mostaert. Mr. Marks has since supplemented
-and explained his views in the essay
-mentioned; whilst Miss Frances Weale has
-published an excellent study on the "van
-Eycks," which, in a concise and interesting
-form, presents her father's views on the
-subject.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is, of course, likely that nothing is proved
-as to the authorship of certain paintings by the
-presence or absence of the exotic plants or
-other details ascribed to one or other of the
-brothers. Supposing the assumed visit of
-Hubert to Southern Europe to be a fact, Jan
-may have made use of his brother's studies
-to embellish his landscapes; or Hubert may
-have utilized Jan's studies. But either supposition
-is extremely unlikely. We have certain
-proof that Jan did several times visit the South,
-while Hubert's sojourn in these parts is pure
-surmise; and not only is it likely that, rather
-than make use of second-hand material, Hubert
-left portions of the pictures to be painted by
-Jan, but the examination of the various pictures
-reveals the same hand in the painting of the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P35"></a>35}</span>
-recurring details. We must, then, take the
-facts and the most likely deductions in preference
-to deductions drawn from data which are merely
-conjectural.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Documentary evidence proves that Jan,
-immediately after his reception by the King of
-Portugal on January 12, 1429, began the work
-of painting the portrait of the Infanta, which,
-by the way, was executed in tempera, and not
-in oil. This painting is, unfortunately, lost,
-and though there are several portraits of
-Isabella now extant, of which one at least may
-be a copy of Jan's picture, there is nothing in
-any of them that can be traced to this master.
-He took a month over its completion, and
-while the Court and Embassy were awaiting
-the decision of Philip, to whom the picture had
-been sent, Jan and his colleagues had time to
-visit several places of interest and people of
-distinction. They travelled to the north to
-see the shrine of St. Iago of Compostella; then
-to the south, where they were received in turn
-by the Duke of Arjona and the King of Castile;
-and then to Granada, in the extreme south,
-where they visited the King of that city. It is
-stated that they also visited many other places;
-and, as from Granada they returned to Lisbon,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P36"></a>36}</span>
-they must have passed through the country
-lying between Cordova and Seville.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now, through the whole of the south-eastern
-portion of the peninsula the palmetto, or
-dwarf-palm, flourishes abundantly, and Jan could not
-fail during his tour to become well acquainted
-with it. In a letter which Mr. Marks quotes in
-his paper read at the Royal Society of Literature,
-June 24, 1903, Mr. Luffmann, Director
-of the School of Horticulture in Melbourne,
-says that the triangle formed by Seville,
-Cordova, and Osuna, is "a piece of country
-which is literally overrun by the plant," and
-that the root of the palmetto is commonly used
-in those parts as fuel. In Italy it is but of
-rare occurrence, though it grows in some of the
-islands of the Mediterranean; whilst in the
-parts of Spain and Portugal visited by Jan it is
-almost impossible for the visitor to avoid
-seeing it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Failing, then, even the probability that
-Hubert ever saw the palmetto growing, we
-must credit Jan with the painting of this plant,
-which, like all the other exotics, must have
-been carefully studied from nature, for they are
-represented in most minute, careful, and
-conscientious manner, and are absolutely true to
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P37"></a>37}</span>
-life. The palmetto occurs in the picture of
-<i>St. Francis receiving the Stigmata</i> (above referred
-to); in the <i>St. Anthony with the Donor</i> at
-Copenhagen; and in <i>The Three Marys at the Sepulchre</i>
-in the collection of Sir Frederick Cook at
-Richmond. The portions of these paintings by
-Hubert van Eyck, where the palmetto occurs,
-may therefore be safely ascribed to the hand
-of Jan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Other exotic plants, which are not restricted
-to Spain and Portugal, occur in these pictures;
-but they are painted by the same hand, and
-betray the same loving adherence to truth, and
-a similar familiarity with the plants as they
-grow. It is therefore patent that they, too,
-must be ascribed to Jan, for it is impossible to
-suppose that the younger brother's work on
-these pictures was simply that of adding the by
-no means necessary dwarf-palm to Hubert's
-completed landscapes. Jan was probably
-responsible for the design and execution of these
-landscapes. These other exotics also occur in
-the Ghent altar-piece, in the <i>Calvary</i> of the
-Berlin Museum, and in the copy, at the same
-museum, of a lost <i>Virgin and Child</i>, Mr. Marks
-produces further evidence to prove that Jan
-must have painted not only the foliage, but the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P38"></a>38}</span>
-whole of the landscapes where the little palm
-appears, including in most cases the
-architecture. He draws attention to the
-architectural features in the <i>Chancellor Rolin with
-Saints</i> in the Louvre, and the signed and dated
-altar-piece by Jan in the museum at Bruges:
-"The architecture in these pictures is not a real
-architecture&mdash;that is, it has not been copied
-from any actual examples.... Agreement is
-general that it is an architecture invented, not
-merely copied." These pictures furnish
-evidence of the painter having visited Italy, for
-marble is represented in a most lavish manner.
-This marble is not characteristic of Northern
-architecture; its use is distinctly Italian. The
-painting of it displays the usual care and
-conscientiousness common to all Jan's works.
-Further points cited by Mr. Marks as evidence
-of Jan's work in various pictures are the
-representations of snow-mountains in various works,
-and the presence of a flying flock of geese.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The former is of greater importance, as this
-again points to acquaintance with the South,
-where alone the painter could have seen
-snow-mountains. Now, as very similar architecture
-to that in the altar-piece at Bruges, which is
-signed by Jan van Eyck, is found in the <i>Chancellor
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P39"></a>39}</span>
-Rolin</i> (Louvre), the <i>Virgin and Child</i> (Dresden),
-and the <i>Carthusian Monk with Saints</i> (Gustave
-de Rothschild, Paris), the suggestion is clear
-that in all these pictures the architecture is the
-work of Jan, and several notable critics hold
-this view. In three of these four paintings we
-find the snow-mountains&mdash;namely, in the
-Dresden triptych, the <i>Chancellor Rolin</i>, and the
-<i>Carthusian Monk</i>. And having established Jan
-as the author of these snow-mountains, we
-must credit him with the landscapes where this
-feature occurs in other pictures&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, the Ghent
-altar-piece, the <i>Crucifixion</i> of the Hermitage in
-St. Petersburg, the <i>Calvary</i> of the Berlin
-Museum, and the <i>Three Marys</i> of Sir Frederick
-Cook. The theory that Jan is responsible for
-the snow-mountains is amply supported by the
-very reasonable deduction that he must at some
-time have visited Italy. This is gathered from
-the Italian character of the architecture, together
-with the snow seen in the Rothschild picture,
-the <i>Chancellor Rolin</i>, the <i>Carthusian Monk</i>, and
-the Dresden picture. The theory is further
-supported by the presence of the palmetto
-together with snow-mountains in the <i>Three
-Marys</i> of Sir Frederick Cook. Here the
-palmetto proves the authorship of the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P40"></a>40}</span>
-landscape, and as the view contains snow-mountains
-it very materially strengthens the supposition
-that it was Jan, and not Hubert, who painted
-them, and who consequently must have been
-to the South of Europe&mdash;probably Italy&mdash;to
-have seen them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The flock of geese, which appears in no fewer
-than six pictures in addition to Jan's signed
-<i>St. Barbara</i> at Antwerp, is of very much less
-importance than the snow-mountains and the
-palmetto, for here the only use that can be
-made of it as evidence is its frequent repetition.
-It is found in the landscapes of the Ghent
-altar-piece, in the <i>Chancellor Rolin</i>, the
-<i>Carthusian Monk</i>, another version of the same
-subject in the Berlin Museum, <i>St. Francis receiving
-the Stigmata</i>, and in the <i>Three Marys</i>. But the
-flock of wild-geese is not a feature made use of
-by the van Eyck brothers only. It seems to
-have been of common occurrence in several
-other Flemish painters both before and after
-the days of the van Eycks. Nevertheless, its
-presence in the pictures enumerated has been
-brought forward as supplementary evidence to
-prove the collaboration of Hubert and Jan.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-040"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-040.jpg" alt="ST. BARBARA. BY JAN VAN EYCK.">
-<br>
-ST. BARBARA. <br>
-BY JAN VAN EYCK.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So far, then, evidence has been shown to
-prove Jan's share in the following pictures: the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P41"></a>41}</span>
-<i>Chancellor Rolin</i>, the <i>Virgin and Child</i> (at
-Dresden), the <i>Carthusian Monk</i> in the Rothschild
-Collection, <i>St. Francis receiving the Stigmata</i>,
-<i>St. Anthony and the Donor</i> (at Copenhagen), <i>The
-Three Marys at the Sepulchre</i>, the <i>Crucifixion</i> (at
-St. Petersburg), the <i>Calvary</i> (at Berlin), and
-the great altar-piece at St. Bavo, Ghent. Still
-another point which has been generally urged
-to prove collaboration of the two brothers is
-the appearance of their portraits in certain
-pictures. They are seen in the panel of the
-Ghent altar-piece representing the <i>Just Judges</i>,
-in the copy of the lost <i>Fountain of Life</i> or <i>The
-Triumph of the Church over the Synagogue</i> in the
-Madrid Museum, and also, it is said, in the
-<i>Crucifixion</i> of St. Petersburg.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though the theory of collaboration is an old
-one, doubts have arisen amongst modern critics,
-who have shown a growing tendency to ascribe
-the majority of the unsigned works solely to
-the elder brother, which attribution is refuted
-not only by the arguments here set forth, but
-by many early writers, including Guicciardini
-and van Mander, both notable and reliable
-historians.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Before leaving the question of collaboration,
-a few words must be said concerning the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P42"></a>42}</span>
-controversy that has arisen over the Ghent
-altar-piece. This painting is indisputably the
-masterpiece of the van Eycks, and is of
-stupendous proportions. The panel of the
-<i>Adoration of the Lamb</i>, from which the whole
-alter-piece takes its name, and the shutters
-depicting the <i>Just Judges</i>, the <i>Warriors of Christ</i>,
-the <i>Holy Hermits</i>, and the <i>Holy Pilgrims</i>, have
-by many critics been attributed to Hubert's
-unaided efforts. It is therefore interesting to
-examine the landscape backgrounds of these
-five panels, and to consider them in the light
-of the evidence deduced from the backgrounds
-of the other "collaboration" pictures.
-Evidence is needed to prove that Jan's work was
-not merely confined to finishing the picture
-after his brother's death (the inscription states
-that it was begun by Hubert and finished by
-Jan), which in itself, of course, does not prove
-collaboration of the brothers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the first place, Jan's handiwork must be
-identified. In the pictures already discussed
-it has been proved fairly conclusively that Jan
-is responsible for the painting of the exotic
-plants, the snow-mountains, the flock of wild
-geese, and the architectural setting. The
-landscapes in the Ghent altar-piece contain exotic
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P43"></a>43}</span>
-plants, wild geese, and snow-mountains. Of
-the latter it is difficult to speak; they are
-whitish in colour, but their formation is neither
-so natural nor so well designed as in the <i>Three
-Marys</i>. The exotic plants alone prove Jan's
-work here. The birds may, or may not, be
-very important. They serve, however, by
-their repeated appearance in Jan's other
-pictures, as auxiliary evidence. The question
-for proof, however, is not the presence of Jan's
-work on this picture, but the presence of his
-work before the death of his brother. And
-from this point of view it is significant that,
-though other exotics are present in profusion,
-the palmetto&mdash;a sure result of Jan's visit to
-Portugal&mdash;does not appear. The whole work
-is stated in the inscription to have been finished
-on May 6, 1432, two years after Jan's return
-from Portugal. Now, the absence of the
-palmetto from this picture points to one of two
-conclusions&mdash;either the work left for Jan to do
-in the completion was comparatively trifling,
-or that the greater part of the picture, including
-the design of the landscapes, was already
-finished before Jan met with the palmetto.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That the work of the younger brother was
-not insignificant is distinctly stated in the text
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P44"></a>44}</span>
-of the inscription: "The painter, Hubert van
-Eyck, greater than whom none is to be found,
-began [the work]; the bulk was completed by
-his brother Jan, second to him in art, relying
-on the request of Jodoc Vydt. This verse
-invites you to contemplate that which was
-completed on May 6, 1432." This translation
-from the Latin is chosen from three versions.
-The other renderings seem to be given by those
-who would translate the word <i>pondus</i> as <i>work</i>,
-and thus give the younger brother credit for
-no more than finishing an incomplete picture.
-The text has, however, been translated by
-several learned scholars, who are entirely free
-from the taint of partisanship, and it is now
-generally agreed that the translation given
-here is the correct one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There is yet another possibility which the
-absence of the palmetto points to&mdash;namely, that
-the picture was practically finished before Jan's
-visit to Portugal, save some very minor details,
-which were completed in 1432, The presence
-of the other exotics points to this view being
-correct, for it would obviously be unlikely that
-Jan should omit the palmetto from all these
-five landscapes after his careful studies of his
-favourite plant. The other exotics, not being
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P45"></a>45}</span>
-a result of the journey, may very well have
-been painted before 1429. Collaboration in
-this work is further proved by the portraits of
-the two brothers.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap07"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P46"></a>46}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-OUR ILLUSTRATIONS
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The supreme masterpiece of the brothers
-van Eyck, the work which, in the history
-of Flemish art, has played the part that was
-allotted to Masaccio's frescoes at the Carmine,
-Florence, in the art of Italy, is the gigantic
-polyptych painted for the chapel of the Vydt
-family in the Cathedral of St. John (now
-St. Bavo) in Ghent, and known from the subject
-of the chief panel as the <i>Adoration of the Lamb</i>.
-In its original form this altar-piece, which is
-now divided between St. Bavo Cathedral and
-the museums of Berlin and Brussels, was
-composed of twelve interior panels and a predella
-(which has unfortunately been destroyed).
-Including the backs of the shutters, which, like
-the panels themselves, are covered with the
-most minute and exquisite painting, the painted
-surface extends to over 1,000 square feet. The
-centre panel alone, from which the whole altar-piece
-takes its name, measures 7¼ feet in width
-by 4½ feet in height.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P47"></a>47}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Horizontally the whole altar-piece is divided
-into three portions. The central panel of
-the middle tier is occupied by the <i>Adoration of
-the Lamb</i>. Like the rest of the picture, it is
-treated in a decorative spirit, the grouping of
-the figures, the architecture, and the foliage
-being almost geometrically arranged and
-balanced. In a very beautiful and peaceful
-landscape is set up, on a green mound in the
-centre, an altar, upon which stands the Lamb
-of God. Its breast is pierced in the customary
-manner, the sacred blood flowing into a chalice
-at its feet. Immediately around the altar
-fourteen angels, symbolical, probably, of the
-stations of the Passion of Christ, kneel in
-adoration. The two in front of the altar offer
-incense, while emblems of the Passion are held
-by others. The cross is held on the left, and
-the pillar of the scourging stands on the right.
-In the foreground, also in the centre and below
-the altar, is the Fountain of Life, which divides
-two groups of worshippers: on the left are the
-Jewish prophets and patriarchs of the Old
-Testament, whilst the crowd on the right is
-composed of Popes, Bishops, priests, monks,
-and laymen. In the background, emerging
-from the luxuriant forest immediately behind
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P48"></a>48}</span>
-the altar, two processions slowly wend their
-way. The group on the right is composed of
-holy women, foremost of whom come St. Agnes
-with a lamb, St. Catherine, and others. The
-Procession on the left again includes Popes,
-Bishops, and monks. These are said to be the
-confessors. Above all hovers the Holy Ghost
-in the form of the dove.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The painting of these figures is most exquisite.
-The draperies are soft and pleasing;
-the colour is deep and rich; while the faces are
-remarkable for their character and variety of
-expression. The jewels and ornaments worn
-by some of the Popes and Bishops are drawn
-with loving care, and the enrichments of the
-vestments betray a patience and skill that
-create wonder. In the distance, above the trees,
-are seen cities with many towers and churches,
-behind which are hills in the remote distance.
-The foreground of the beautiful, soft, spring-like
-grass is profusely enriched by the growth
-of innumerable flowers and shrubs, all of which
-are painted with consummate skill and truth.
-The whole picture makes a profound effect by
-its sumptuous splendour, and by the masterly
-disposal of light and shade.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The two panels on the left are the <i>Just Judges</i>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P49"></a>49}</span>
-and <i>Christ's Warriors</i>. In the <i>Judges</i> the whole
-lower half of the picture is taken up by figures
-on horses. Behind a cliff in the middle distance
-is seen a forest and some buildings of elaborate
-architecture, which may represent tribunals.
-The bridles and trappings of the horses are
-richly jewelled, and altogether the best is made
-of the opportunity of rendering with goldsmith-like
-precision all manner of gorgeous materials,
-costly and beautifully emblazoned banners, and
-armour and trappings of beautiful design.
-Tradition has it that two of the <i>Judges</i> are
-portraits of the painters, the one in a black
-garment with a red rosary, who is turning
-towards the spectator, being the younger brother
-Jan. To strengthen the theory that this figure
-was painted by Jan after Hubert's death,
-Mr. Weale suggests that the black habit and red
-rosary denote mourning, probably for his
-brother Hubert.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As regards the other panel, Mr. Six has
-advanced an interesting theory with respect to
-the soldier who wears a blue head-dress. He
-calls attention to a <i>pentimento</i> in substituting
-for a crown on this figure the blue head-dress.
-Mr. Six claims to have identified this figure as
-Jean Sans Peur, who probably saw the painting,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P50"></a>50}</span>
-and objected to being represented with a crown
-while Godfrey de Bouillon wore only a fur cap,
-and therefore persuaded the painter to alter it
-to the blue cap or bonnet which was the badge
-of the Burgundians against the Armagnacs.
-From this the supposed alteration must have
-taken place a little after 1410, whereas, according
-to early art historians, the altar-piece was
-only begun between 1415 and 1420.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-050"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-050.jpg" alt="THE JUST JUDGES, AND CHRIST'S WARRIORS. BY HUBERT AND JAN VAN EYCK.">
-<br>
-THE JUST JUDGES, AND CHRIST'S WARRIORS. <br>
-BY HUBERT AND JAN VAN EYCK.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though the limitations of the present little
-volume make it impossible to reproduce the
-other panels which originally formed part of
-the colossal altar-piece, it will not be out of
-place here to describe them in detail, as they
-all form part of a wonderfully complete and
-harmonious scheme. As pendants to the <i>Judges</i>
-and <i>Warriors</i>, to the right of the central panel
-were the <i>Holy Hermits</i> and the <i>Holy Pilgrims</i>.
-Rocks, cliff, and foliage are found in the
-background of the hermits, but, as suggestive of
-retirement and remoteness, no architecture is
-seen. The pilgrims are represented walking up
-a valley towards the spectator. On the right,
-in the background, is a hill covered with
-various trees, and in the distance is seen a
-river and meadows, with a town and low hills
-beyond. The pilgrims are led by St. Christopher,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P51"></a>51}</span>
-whose giant proportions tower above the rest
-of the procession.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The upper tier of the polyptych consists of
-seven panels, or rather three panels, the
-combined width of which corresponds with that of
-the <i>Adoration</i> panel below, and two shutters on
-each side. The grand figure in the centre
-panel, majestically enthroned, has been
-variously held to represent God the Father
-and Christ, and the Latin inscription may be
-equally applied to both. Perhaps it was the
-painter's idea to personify both in one figure.
-On His brow is the Crown of Heaven, and at
-His feet the Crown of Purity and Innocence,
-which the Lamb has won on earth. The panel
-to His right shows the Virgin, gazing in devotion
-at an open book in her hands&mdash;a conception
-of such purity and innocence that it recalls the
-spirit of Fra Angelico. To his left is the
-equally nobly conceived figure of St. John, an
-open book in his lap, with his right hand raised,
-as it were, in exhortation. The monumental
-style of these figures, and their deep significance,
-leave no doubt that these panels are from the
-brush of the elder brother Hubert.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These panels are flanked by two shutters on
-each side&mdash;a choir of angels and St. Cecilia
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P52"></a>52}</span>
-with some angels within, and <i>Adam</i> and <i>Eve</i>
-at the extreme ends. The relentless realism of
-the latter, which borders close on ugliness,
-marks them as the work of Jan. The figures
-are undoubtedly painted from life, and were
-held to be so wonderful that for some time the
-whole altar-piece was known as the "Adam
-and Eve painting." Jan may also be held
-responsible for the angels and St. Cecilia, both
-of which have many characteristics that tally
-with well-authenticated works by the master.
-The predella which originally adorned the
-altar-piece has unfortunately been destroyed.
-The reverse of the lower shutters shows the
-figures of St. John the Evangelist, St. John the
-Baptist, and portraits of the donor, Jodoc Vydt,
-and his wife; and of the upper shutters, the
-Annunciation and figures of prophets and
-sibyls. Only the <i>Adoration</i> and the three
-important panels above (God the Father, the
-Virgin, and St. John) remain at the Cathedral
-of St. Bavo at Ghent; the <i>Adam</i> and <i>Eve</i> are
-now at the Brussels Museum, and the other
-shutters at the Berlin Museum.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There are still extant portions of a copy of
-this great work which was painted at the
-command of Philip II. of Spain by Michael
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P53"></a>53}</span>
-Cocxie. The wings of this copy are now added
-to the original centre portion at Ghent. There
-is a second copy of the Ghent altar-piece in the
-museum of Antwerp.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Upon the consecration of the great masterpiece
-at St. Bavo vast multitudes of people
-came into the city to see the work, the fame of
-which soon became known throughout the
-whole of Western Europe. And for more than
-four centuries it remained the wonder of Ghent.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. R. Petrucci states that in 1904, during
-a demolition of a house in the Rue du Gouvernement
-at Ghent, the old walls were discovered
-of a Steen believed to have been the property
-of Jodoc Vydt, the patron of the van Eycks,
-who commissioned them to execute the Ghent
-polyptych. In a room upon the third floor,
-40 feet up, a square window was discovered
-exactly answering in orientation and position
-to the town which appears in the <i>Adoration of
-the Lamb</i>, and which has been recognised as a
-view over the Rue Courte du Jour. In the
-foreground is seen the Steen, on the site of
-which was afterwards built the little butcher's
-shop near the present bird-market. Above it
-rises the tournelle of the weavers' chapel, which
-was used in turn as a butcher's shop, a pleasure
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P54"></a>54}</span>
-resort, and a place of auction, and is now a
-garage for motor-cars. Further away, in the
-background, is the old fortified gate which
-defended the passage of the bridge of the canal
-of the coppersmiths. On the left of the scene
-is a representation of another front of the Steen,
-which stood on that side at the corner of the
-Rue Courte du Jour and the Rue de Brabant.
-The window reveals this scene exactly. "It
-seems certain," says Mr. Petrucci, "that this
-was the room in which Hubert and Jan, or, at
-any rate, Jan, van Eyck painted the famous
-polyptych of the Mystic Lamb."
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-* * * * *
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The portrait group by Jan van Eyck known
-as <i>Jan Arnolfini and Jeanne dc Chenany, his Wife</i>,
-must be counted among the greatest treasures
-of the London National Gallery, as it is,
-perhaps, the most perfect as well as the most
-characteristic example of the master's art.
-Arnolfini, who was Jan's brother-in-law, a man
-of solemn and depressing countenance, with
-heavy, drooping lids and long, wide-nostrilled
-nose, is seen standing in his bed-chamber.
-His right hand is raised as if enjoining silence,
-his left extended to his wife, whose open
-countenance denotes docility and calm.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P55"></a>55}</span>
-Arnolfini wears a tunic of a dark green stuff,
-over which is a cloak of dark red, which reaches
-well below the knees, and is lined and edged
-with fur. It is divided at the sides from the
-bottom to the shoulder. He wears a large and
-curiously shaped hat, which in a manner
-resembles a "beefeater's" head-gear. His
-wife is habited in a long and ample robe of
-green, rather bright in colour, and lined and
-trimmed with white fur. She has raised the
-folds of the robe in front, thus revealing an
-undergarment of dark blue, trimmed also with
-fur. Round her strikingly high waist is a
-narrow belt of leather, decorated with gilding
-and polished. On her head is a large kerchief
-with a worked border, which is caught up at
-the sides in the prevailing fashion. Round her
-neck she wears a double row of pearls. The
-drawing of the drapery, which falls straight to
-the floor, is bold and severe, realistic, and
-devoid of any attempt at affectation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the foreground is a small dog, and to the
-left, on the floor, a pair of pattens. In the
-centre of the room, slightly behind and above
-the heads of the figures, hangs a brass
-chandelier of pierced work. Of its six arms only
-one holds a candle, and this is burning, the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P56"></a>56}</span>
-single flame being probably a symbol of
-conjugal affection or unity, as there is no other
-reason for its presence in a chamber well lit by
-two large windows on the left&mdash;one behind the
-figures and one in advance, which is not shown,
-but the light from which falls straight upon the
-faces. On the wall behind the two figures a
-circular convex mirror reflects a portion of the
-room, with two additional figures. Beside it
-hangs an amber rosary. The flesh painting is
-admirably soft, delicate, and transparent; the
-light and shade powerful, yet so well arranged
-that only the closest examination will reveal
-what an important factor it is in the success of
-the picture. The whole thing is touching in
-the simple straightforwardness of statement,
-and all the details are wrought with inimitable
-but unobtrusive minute precision. In the
-management of tone-values and of indoors
-atmosphere Jan proves himself in this picture
-far ahead of his time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The signature of this Arnolfini picture is
-written in ornamental Gothic characters
-immediately above the mirror, and takes the
-extraordinary form "Johannes de Eyck fuit hic"
-(Jan van Eyck was here), with the date 1434.
-Owing to this ambiguous wording, which may
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P57"></a>57}</span>
-be, and has been, interpreted as "this was Jan
-van Eyck," the picture was formerly held to
-represent the artist himself and his wife, a theory
-which still has its defenders. A full pedigree
-of the picture is given in the National Gallery
-catalogue. It belonged in 1516 to Margaret of
-Austria, to whom it was given by Don Diego
-de Guevara, whose arms were painted on the
-shutters which were originally attached to it.
-Afterwards it passed into the hands of a
-barber-surgeon at Bruges, who presented it to the
-then Regent of the Netherlands, Mary, the
-sister of Charles V., and Queen Dowager of
-Hungary. This Princess valued the picture so
-highly that she granted the barber-surgeon in
-return a pension, or office, worth 100 florins
-per annum. The picture is included in the list
-of valuables which she carried with her to
-Spain in 1556, from which date it disappeared
-until 1815, when it was discovered by
-Major-General Hay in the apartments to which he
-was taken, in Brussels, to recover from wounds
-received at Waterloo. He subsequently
-purchased the picture, and disposed of it to the
-British Government in 1842, since which date
-it has been at the National Gallery. Henri
-Bouchot was of opinion that the picture is not
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P58"></a>58}</span>
-the one of Arnolfini the traces of which are
-lost in 1556, but a portrait of van Eyck and
-his wife, painted as a pendant to the lost
-Arnolfini group. To support his view he
-pointed out the resemblance of the woman in
-this picture with the portrait of Jan's wife at
-the Bruges Museum.
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-* * * * *
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-058"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-058.jpg" alt="PORTRAIT OF TIMOTHY. BY JAN VAN EYCK.">
-<br>
-PORTRAIT OF TIMOTHY. <br>
-BY JAN VAN EYCK.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The portrait at the National Gallery which,
-from the name inscribed in Greek characters
-on the stone parapet that extends across the
-bottom of the panel, is known as the bust of
-Timothy, bears the date October 10, 1432,
-and is therefore the earliest of Jan's signed and
-dated pictures&mdash;always excepting the
-much-overpainted Chatsworth panel of 1421. It is
-not in quite so good a state of preservation as
-the other portrait of a man by Jan, in the
-same Gallery, which is dated 1433, but the face
-itself is in fairly good condition. The features
-are broad and massive, and inclined to
-heaviness; the eyes are somewhat deep-set, while
-the cheek-bones are prominent. His right
-hand holds a small roll of parchment with
-some writing upon it. On the parapet, beneath
-the Greek word "Tymotheos," is the inscription
-LEAL SOVVENIR, and the signature
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P59"></a>59}</span>
-"Factū año. Dm&#772;. 1432. 10. die Octobris. a
-Joh. de Eyck."
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-* * * * *
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The portrait known as <i>The Man with the
-Pinks</i> at the Berlin Museum, is one of the
-most characteristic of Jan's portraits. It shows
-an elderly man in a dark grey coat with fur
-cuffs and collar and a broad-brimmed beaver
-hat. At the neck the brocade collar of a tunic
-shows above the fur collar of the coat. The
-ornament of this brocade seems to consist of
-the alternating letters Y and C, which occur in
-one or two other portraits of the period, and
-may eventually afford some clue as to the
-identity of the sitter. Round the neck is a
-twisted wire chain, from which hangs a headless
-cross and the bell of St. Anthony. Both hands
-are raised as high as the breast, the fingers and
-thumb of the left holding three pinks. A handsome
-ring with two stones is on the third finger.
-The face, wrinkled and lined, is full of expression
-and life; the lips are parted, as though
-about to give utterance to speech. Though
-the drawing is almost hard in its exact delineation,
-it is far from rigid. It is altogether an
-admirable example of Jan's lifelike realism,
-that loves to dwell on every little ugly
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P60"></a>60}</span>
-detail&mdash;ill-shapen ears, puffy "tear-bags," warts and
-wrinkles&mdash;and yet infuses the whole thing with
-the beauty of life and character.
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-* * * * *
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-060"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-060.jpg" alt="THE VAN DER PAELE ALTAR-PIECE. BY JAN VAN EYCK.">
-<br>
-THE VAN DER PAELE ALTAR-PIECE. <br>
-BY JAN VAN EYCK.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The <i>Virgin and Child, with St. Donatian,
-St. George, and the Donor, George van der Paele</i>,
-Canon of the ancient Cathedral of St. Donatian
-at Bruges, bears the date 1436, and is the
-most important of Jan van Eyck's religious
-compositions. The scene is in the circular
-apse of a Romanesque church, lighted by the
-soft rays that filter through the leaded
-windows. The Virgin, draped in a red cloak, is
-seen in the centre under a green canopy, holding
-the Christ-Child in her lap. She has the same
-heavy, matronly features as the Virgin of <i>The
-Annunciation</i> in St. Petersburg and of the
-Chancellor Rolin picture in Paris, and is no
-more idealised than the by no means attractive
-infant Saviour, who is playing with a parrot.
-It is all very human and wonderfully true, and
-for that very reason lacking in spiritual
-significance. On the left stands St. Donatian in a
-gorgeous and marvellously painted brocade
-robe, whilst on the right St. George, in
-armour, presents the kneeling Canon van der
-Paele to the Virgin. The patron saint, again,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P61"></a>61}</span>
-is obviously painted from a model of low rank
-in life&mdash;perhaps a peasant or a stableman;
-whilst the rugged irregular features of the donor
-are set down with an honest and painstaking
-straightforwardness that seems to delight in doing
-full justice to all the sitter's ugliness. As
-objective portraiture pure and simple, this head of van
-der Paele has probably never been surpassed
-in the whole history of art. The supreme
-mastery of Jan van Eyck manifests itself in the
-creation of a work of unforgettable beauty and
-sumptuous splendour from such unpromising
-material. The ugliness of the types chosen is
-forgotten when one's eyes revel in the rich
-scheme of colour, the extraordinary beauty of
-the painting of all the stuffs and accessories,
-the perfect modelling of the features, and,
-above all, the (for the time) amazing knowledge
-of the effect of light. With all the richness of
-pigment there is not a single note in this whole
-large panel that is not absolutely "in tone";
-nothing is forced, nothing arbitrary, as though
-the fifteenth-century master had already adopted
-the principle of the nineteenth-century
-impressionists&mdash;"the first subject of a
-picture is light."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The van der Paele altar-piece was in the
-sacristy of the church of St. Donatian when
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P62"></a>62}</span>
-the old basilica was destroyed by the revolutionary
-troops. It was taken to Paris, together
-with much other artistic booty, but was returned
-to Bruges in 1814, and is now in the Museum
-of the Academy of that city. The drapery round
-the loins of the infant Saviour is a later
-addition which does not appear in the excellent
-early copy at the Antwerp Museum, from
-which our illustration is a reproduction. The
-original at Bruges bears the inscription in small
-Gothic letters: <i>Hoc opus fecit fieri magister
-Georgius de Pala, huius ecclesie canonicus, per
-Johannem de Eyck pictorem. Et fundavit hic duas
-capellanias de gremio chori domini M. ccc°. xxxiiij°.,
-completing anno</i> 1436°.
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-* * * * *
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At the Museum of Antwerp is the exquisite
-unfinished little painting of <i>St. Barbara</i>, signed
-and dated: JOHES DE EYCK ME FECIT 1437. The
-saint, with an open book on her lap and a
-palm-branch in her hand, is seated in front of an
-elaborately designed Gothic tower in course of
-construction. Around the tower are numerous
-figures of labourers, masons, horsemen, and
-others; and the background shows a landscape
-with mountains, castles, rivers, fields and trees,
-and a town on a hill. Technically, this picture
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P63"></a>63}</span>
-is supremely interesting, as it shows that at a
-comparatively late period of his life&mdash;a quarter
-of a century after the reputed discovery of
-oil-painting&mdash;Jan has not altogether discarded the
-practice of tempera-painting. For the whole
-composition, the pensive-looking saint and
-the widespread angular folds of her garment, the
-tower and the figures, are carefully drawn and
-shaded in brown tempera colour on a preparation
-of gum or white of egg. Only the part
-which required no special design, the sky, is
-painted in oil-colour. It may thus be assumed
-that it was the practice of the brothers van
-Eyck to work with oil-colours on a tempera
-foundation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The <i>St. Barbara</i> also confirms Karel van
-Mander's statement that Jan's sketches were
-more complete and more carefully wrought
-than the finished paintings of other artists.
-M. Henri Hymaus suggests that this
-<i>St. Barbara</i> is the very painting which van
-Mander mentions as being in the possession of
-his master Lucas de Heere at Ghent, and
-"representing a woman behind whom was a
-landscape; it was but a preparation, and yet
-extraordinarily beautiful."
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-* * * * *
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P64"></a>64}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Our last illustration represents, or is supposed
-to represent, <i>The Enthronement of Thomas à
-Becket as Archbishop of Canterbury</i>, and is in
-the possession of the Duke of Devonshire, at
-Chatsworth. In a late Norman church Thomas
-à Becket is seen in the foreground under a
-scarlet canopy, with the Holy Ghost hovering
-near, and above is a splendid crown in which
-the figure of the risen Christ is introduced;
-above the crown is a circle with a Virgin and
-Child. Three Bishops are engaged in placing
-the mitre upon the head of the saint, while a
-priest with an open book is kneeling before
-him. On the right are the clergy and on the
-left the laity, with King Henry II. at their
-head. On the border is the inscription: <i>Johes
-de Eyck, fecit, ano, M°.CCCCZI, 30° Octobris</i>.
-This inscription, if genuine, is the only evidence
-of Jan's authorship of the picture which has
-been entirely repainted, so that nothing of the
-original work is to be seen. The date, 1421,
-is eleven years earlier than any other dated
-picture by Jan van Eyck. It is scarcely
-necessary to point out the importance of this
-fact to the art historian in search of evidence
-of Jan's early activity; but whilst the picture
-remains in its present condition it cannot throw
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P65"></a>65}</span>
-any light upon the debated points. Only if the
-surface paint were removed would it be
-possible to judge whether below it is a real
-early work of Jan van Eyck, and what was
-the relative position of the two brothers before
-Hubert's death.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<i>The Enthronement of Thomas à Becket</i> has
-an interesting pedigree. It was given by
-John, Duke of Bedford, to King Henry V., and
-was afterwards in the collection of the second
-Earl of Arundel, who died at Padua in 1646,
-bequeathing it to Henry, the sixth Duke of
-Norfolk, by whose son, the seventh Duke, it
-was sold. It came through the Duke's steward,
-Mr. Fox, to a Mr. Sykes, who sold it to the
-Duke of Devonshire in 1722.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap08"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P66"></a>66}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
- LIST OF WORKS,<br>
- CATALOGUED ACCORDING TO<br>
- LOCALITY<br>
-</h3>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-AUSTRIA-HUNGARY.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-VIENNA MUSEUM.&mdash;Portrait of <i>Jan de Leeuw</i> (Jan),
-signed and dated 1436.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Portrait of <i>Nicolas Albergati</i>, Cardinal of the Church
-of the Holy Cross (Jan), painted, probably, in 1431,
-when the Cardinal passed through Flanders on a
-political mission. This picture is mentioned in the
-inventory of the Archduke Leopold William, Governor
-of the Netherlands, 1655. A silver-point sketch for
-the portrait is in the Dresden Print Cabinet.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-BELGIUM.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-GHENT, CATHEDRAL OF ST. BAVO.&mdash;The <i>Adoration
-of the Lamb</i> triptych (Hubert and Jan; see <a href="#P46">p. 46</a>).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P67"></a>67}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-ANTWERP MUSEUM.&mdash;<i>St. Barbara</i> (Jan), 1437 (see
-<a href="#P62">p. 62</a>).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<i>The Virgin and Child by the Fountain</i> (Jan), 1439.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-BRUGES MUSEUM.&mdash;<i>Virgin and Child, with St. Donatian,
-St. George, and the Donor, George van der Paele</i> (Jan), 1436
-(see <a href="#P60">p. 60</a>).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Portrait of Jan Van Eyck's Wife (Jan), 1439.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-BRUSSELS MUSEUM.&mdash;<i>Adam and Eve</i>: shutters from
-the <i>Adoration</i> triptych at St. Bavo, Ghent (Jan; see
-<a href="#P52">p. 52</a>).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-LOUVAIN, M. G. HELLEPUTTE.&mdash;Triptych of the <i>Virgin
-and Child, with the Donor, Nicolas de Maelbeke, in Adoration</i>,
-unfinished (Jan), 1340. The shutters contain
-representations of Gideon standing before an angel, the
-burning bush, Aaron with a blossoming rod, and other
-subjects from the Old Testament.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-BRITISH ISLES.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-CHATSWORTH, DUKE OF DEVONSHIRE.&mdash;<i>The Enthronement
-of Thomas à Becket</i> (Jan (?); see <a href="#P64">p. 64</a>).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P68"></a>68}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-INCE HALL, MR. WELD BLUNDELL.&mdash;<i>Virgin and Child</i>
-(Jan): a panel of very small dimensions and miniature-like
-execution, painted in 1432, and inscribed <i>Als ikh
-kan</i> (As well as I can).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-LONDON, NATIONAL GALLERY.&mdash;<i>Jan Arnolfini and
-Jeanne de Chenany, his Wife</i> (Jan), 1434 (see <a href="#P54">p. 54</a>).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Portrait of <i>Timothy</i>, "Leal Souvenir" (Jan), 1432
-(see <a href="#P58">p. 58</a>).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Portrait of a <i>Man with a Chaperon or Turban</i> (Jan),
-1433. Inscribed on the frame: <i>Johes de Eyck me fecit
-anno</i> MCCCC 33 21 <i>Octobris</i>, and <i>Als ikh kan</i>. Formerly
-in the Arundel Collection.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-RICHMOND, SIR FREDERICK COOK.&mdash;<i>The Three Marys
-at the Sepulchre</i> (variously attributed to Hubert and
-Jan).
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-DENMARK.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-COPENHAGEN, ROYAL GALLERY. <i>Robert Poortier,
-protected by St. Antony</i> (Hubert).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P69"></a>69}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-FRANCE.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-PARIS, LOUVRE.&mdash;<i>Chancellor Rolin kneeling before the
-Virgin and Child</i>, with a river landscape seen through a
-loggia of three arches (generally ascribed to Hubert,
-but more probably by Jan).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-BARON G. DE ROTHSCHILD.&mdash;<i>Virgin and Child, with
-St. Anne, St. Barbara, and a Carthusian Monk</i>, who has been
-identified as Herman Steenken, of Suutdorp, Vicar of
-a Carthusian Nunnery near Bruges (Hubert and Jan).
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-GERMANY.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-BERLIN, NATIONAL GALLERY.&mdash;Six shutters from the
-<i>Adoration</i> altar-piece of St. Bavo, Ghent (Hubert and
-Jan; see <a href="#P48">p. 48</a>).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A replica of the <i>Virgin and Child, with a Carthusian
-Monk</i>, in the collection of Baron G. de Rothschild,
-Paris.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<i>Head of Christ</i> (Jan), 1439.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Portrait of a <i>Knight of the Golden Fleece</i>, probably
-Baudouin de Lannoy (Jan).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Man with the Pinks (Jan; see <a href="#P59">p. 59</a>).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P70"></a>70}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-DRESDEN GALLERY.&mdash;Triptych, <i>The Virgin and Child
-Enthroned</i>. On the wings are the figures of St. Catherine
-and the donor, and on the back of the shutters the
-Annunciation (Jan).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-FRANKFORT, STAEDEL INSTITUTE.&mdash;<i>The Virgin and
-Child Enthroned</i> (Jan).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-LEIPZIG MUSEUM.&mdash;<i>Portrait of a Man</i> (Jan?).
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-ITALY.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-TURIN GALLERY.&mdash;Copy of <i>St. Francis receiving the
-Stigmata</i>. The original is in the collection of
-Mr. J. G. Johnston, Philadelphia.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-RUSSIA.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-ST. PETERSBURG, HERMITAGE.&mdash;<i>Calvary and the Last
-Judgment</i>. Wings of a triptych, the centre portion of
-which is lost (Hubert?).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<i>The Annunciation</i> (Jan), formerly in the collection of
-King William II. of Holland. Bought for the Hermitage
-Collection for 13,000 francs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P71"></a>71}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-SPAIN.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-MADRID GALLERY.&mdash;Copy of a lost painting by
-Hubert and Jan van Eyck, representing <i>The Triumph
-of the Church over the Synagogue</i>, also known as <i>The
-Fountain of Life</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-UNITED STATES.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-PHILADELPHIA, J. G. JOHNSTON.&mdash;<i>St. Francis receiving
-the Stigmata</i> (Hubert and Jan). A copy of this picture
-is at the Turin Gallery.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t4">
-BILLING AND SONS, LTD., PRINTERS, GUILDFORD.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br><br></p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BROTHERS VAN EYCK ***</div>
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