Today is Trinity Sundaya day to celebrate and to attempt to reflect upon the ineffable nature of the Godhead.
The Holy Trinity
Robert Campin (circa 1375-1444)
Robert Campin (circa 1375-1444)
Louvain
Image: casa-in -italia.com
This
type of depiction of the Holy Trinity was very popular in the late
middle ages, and popular in alabaster carvings for churches, tombs and domestic use. However it became the object of particular hatred to Lollards and
other such heretics, who saw it as breaching the Second Commandment and
as being idolatrous, and increasingly fell out of favour in the Catholic
Church at Trent because it was open to such theological misunderstanding.
I have posted paintings by Robert Campin before, both because I like them as works of art and devotion and because they are works produced in a period in which I have a particular interest as a historian.
Three works by Campin - a Standing Virgin and Child, Saint Veronica, and
Holy Trinity (all now in the Städelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt) - were wrongly
thought to have come from a non-existent abbey at Flémalle, near Liège giving rise to
the creation of an anonymous Master of Flémalle. It is now generally agreed that this
painter is identical with Robert Campin.
Campin's origins and exact date of birth remain obscure. In 1410 he acquired his
citizenship in Tournai, where he was already working as a painter by 1405-6. He was dean
of the Guild of Saint Luke between 1425 and 1427 and was elected to the town council.
Probably the head of a large workshop, Campin accepted commissions from city officials,
churches, and the bourgeoisie, made designs for banners, coats of arms, and costumes, and
sometimes produced manuscript illuminations. He had two famous pupils, Rogelet de la
Pasture (Rogier van der Weyden) and Jacques Daret, both of whom worked for him until 1432.
The early works of Rogier and those of his master are sometimes confused.
A triptych with the Lamentation (Courtauld Institute Galleries, London) is considered
the earliest of his works. Among the latest is the Von Werl Altarpiece, dated 1438 (Prado,
Madrid), sometimes ascribed to Rogier. While the Annunciation Triptych has
traditionally been viewed as a key painting by the master, its attribution within the
Campin group, is a matter of controversy. Campin's influence was widespread, and some of
his compositions were frequently copied well into the sixteenth century.
Adapted from the Casa-in-Italia website
Here is an example of a textile of the Holy Trinity by Campin. Worked in gold. silver silk embroidery, pearls, glass beads and velvet on linen it is dated to 1433 and is now in the Kunsthistorisches Museum Vienna:
Image: Wikipaintings
Here is a list of other paintings by Campin together with links to them:
Here is a list of other paintings by Campin together with links to them:
- Robert Campin, and assistant (possibly Rogier van der Weyden), The Annunciation Triptych (Merode Triptych), Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, about 1425-30 Annunciation , left wing , right wing
- Annunciation, Madrid, Museo Nacional del Prado
- Marriage of the Virgin, Museo Nacional del Prado, 1420-25
- Enthroned Madonna, Aix-en-Provence, Musée Granet, ca. 1430
- Nativity, Dijon, musée des Beaux-Arts, ca. 1425-30
- Portrait of a man, London, National Gallery, ca. 1420-30
- Portrait of a woman, London, National Gallery, ca. 1420-30
- Seilern Trptych, Courtauld Institute Galleries, London, ca. 1415
- Holy Trinity, Louvain
- Workshop of Robert Campin, Man in prayer, about 1430/35, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
- Copy after Robert Campin, Virgin and Child in a Apse, about 1480
No comments:
Post a Comment