Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-7cvxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-24T00:21:28.255Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Processes and Performance in Renaissance Painting

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 November 2013

Get access

Extract

During the greater part of the 15th century, the Burgundian princes created a stable, unified center for industry and the flourishing of the arts in the Netherlands. Philip the Good became one of the most powerful and wealthy princes of the House of Burgundy in the period. Under his rule, the Netherlands became an important center for commerce. The port of Bruges, and later Antwerp, offered easy access to the important trade routes. The German merchants of the Hansa towns of Bremen, Danzig, Lübeck, and Hamburg and ships from England and the Baltic regions brought wares to be bought and sold in Flemish towns. The routes along the Atlantic and Mediterranean provided direct lines of communication between Italian merchants from Venice, Genoa, Florence, and Bruges.

The Netherlands soon became a center of a large part of the business activity in Europe and its prosperity grew. The concentration of trade, the presence of numerous banks, and the commission they charged contributed to the wealth of its bourgeois merchants and financiers. They soon became as rich and sometimes richer than the Burgundian princes. Thus they had the means to become important patrons of the arts so as to display their wealth. The acquisition of rare and exotic goods became an essential part of a society where exhibiting one's wealth was admired.

Flemish artists' corporations were well organized, not unlike modern businesses. They were well-known locally and abroad and had significant influence on the art of the period. Works of art were created in workshops where a long apprenticeship afforded the artists guidance and expert training in their craft. High standards which contributed to the good reputation of the art of Flanders, were maintained by setting the quality of the materials and establishing the techniques used. The painters' guild controlled the production of paintings and took measures to control the supply of materials to keep down prices and to control competition. Also, contracts between artist and patron would sometimes stipulate the type of materials to be used.

Type
Art and Technology
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 1992

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1.Panoksky, E., Early Netherlandish Painting, Vol. 1, Harvard University Press (Cambridge, 1953) p. 2.Google Scholar
2.Plesters, J., “Ultramarine Blue, Natural and Artificial,” Studies in Conservation 11 (2) (1966) p. 62.Google Scholar
3.Plesters, J., “Ultramarine Blue, Natural and Artificial,” Studies in Conservation 11 (2) (1966), p. 67.Google Scholar
4.Kiihn, H., “Verdigris and Copper Resinate,” Studies in Conservation 15 (1) (1970) p. 12.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
5.Gettens, R., Feller, R., and Chase, W., “Vermilion and Cinnabar,” Studies in Conservation 17 (2) (1972) p. 45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
6.Wolters, C., “The Care of Paintings: Fabric Paint Supports,” Museum XIII (1960) p. 137.Google Scholar
7. See Baxandall, M., “Bartholomaues Facius on Painting: A Fifteenth-Century Manuscript on the De Viris Illustribus,” Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes XXVII (1964) p. 103. This is the first documented evidence of a statement concerning research into the properties of color. It is a theme often repeated by early critics. See G. Vasari, in Le vite de' piu eccellenti pittori, scultori ed architettori, Vol. II, edited by G. Milanesi (Sansoni, Florence, 1878), p. 565-567.Google Scholar
8.Merrifield, M., Original Treatises on the Arts of Painting Vol. II (Dover, New York, 1967) p. 327.Google Scholar
9. Vasari, Vol. II, from Ref. 7, p. 563-567.Google Scholar
10.Theophilus, , De diversis artibus, translated by Hawthorne, J. and Smith, C., On Divers Arts, Chapter 27, (Chicago University Press, Chicago, 1963), p. 3334.Google Scholar
11.Audemar, Petrus de S., De Coloribus Faciendis, in Merrifield, M. I, from Ref. 8, p. 138141.Google Scholar
12.Audemar, Petrus de S., De Coloribus Faciendis, in Merrifield, M. I, from Ref. 8, p. 114115.Google Scholar