The Three Marys at the Tomb (Hubert van Eyck?)
The Three Marys at the Tomb is a c. 1410–26 panel painting usually attributed to Hubert van Eyck, now in the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam. The painting was included at the seminal Exposition des primitifs flamands à Bruges in 1902.[1]
Its authorship and dating have been particularly difficult to establish. For many years it was ascribed the only surviving work—excepting the Ghent Altarpiece—by Hubert, Jan van Eyck's older brother. Erwin Panofsky believed it a collaboration between the two men (similar to the Ghent Altarpiece); others see it as the c. 1440 output of a member of Jan's workshop,[2] others again solely attribute Jan. Estimates of its date of completion range from 1410 to the year of Hubert's death, 1426.[3]
The painting depicts a scene from the lives of the New Testament Three Marys; The Virgin Mary, Mary Magdalene and Mary Salome. They are shown grieving at the site of the entombment of Christ, shown to the left of the tomb, under a hill of jagged rock. To the left are three soldiers, each carrying weapons, and each of whom is asleep. The painting is made up of a series of parallel diagonal lines, most dominant are those between the Virgin and the angel, the angel's pathway, the lengths of the tomb, and the positions of the soldiers. The landscape contains buildings that resembles those in Jerusalem.[3] The sky above the city contains a small passage showing a flock of birds, the earliest depiction in Early Netherlandish painting, although seen again in the "Hermits" panel of the Ghent Altarpiece.[4]
Notes
- ^ "De drie Maria's bij het lege graf, c. 1425–1435". Netherlands Institute for Art History. Retrieved 26 December, 2014
- ^ Nauert, 463
- ^ a b Ferrari, 68
- ^ de Schryver, 143
Sources
- De Schryver, Antoine. The Prayer Book of Charles the Bold. J. Paul Getty Museum, 2008. ISBN 0-8923-6943-4
- Ferrari, Simone. Van Eyck: Masters of Art. Munich: Prestel, 2013. ISBN 3-7913-4826-4
- Nauert, Charles G. The A to Z of the Renaissance. Scarecrow Press, 2013.
- v
- t
- e
- Portrait of a Man with a Blue Chaperon c. 1430
- Léal Souvenir (1432)
- Portrait of Cardinal Niccolò Albergati (1432)
- Portrait of a Man (Self Portrait?) (1433)
- Arnolfini Portrait (1434)
- Portrait of Baudouin de Lannoy c. 1435
- Portrait of Jan de Leeuw (1436)
- Portrait of Giovanni di Nicolao Arnolfini c. 1438
- Portrait of Margaret van Eyck (1439)
works
- Annunciation (Madrid) c. 1432–1434
- Saint Francis Receiving the Stigmata c. 1432–1440
- Annunciation (Washington) c. 1434–1436
- Madonna of Chancellor Rolin (1435)
- Lucca Madonna (1436)
- Virgin and Child with Canon van der Paele (1436)
- Madonna in the Church c. 1438–1440
- Madonna at the Fountain (1439)
- Madonna of Jan Vos (1441–1443)
- Ghent Altarpiece (with Hubert van Eyck, completed 1432)
- Crucifixion and Last Judgement Diptych c. 1430–1440
- Dresden Triptych c. 1437
manuscripts
- Turin–Milan Hours ("Hand G", c. 1420)
- Saint Barbara (1437)
- Study for Cardinal Niccolò Albergati c. 1432
- Study for a Crucifixion c. 1440
- Portrait of Isabella of Portugal c. 1428–29
- Saint Christopher c. 1460
- Woman Bathing c. 1434
- Vera Icon (Head of Christ) (before 1438)
- Madonna of Nicolas van Maelbeke (after 1440)
- The Three Marys at the Tomb c. 1420s
- The Fountain of Life c. 1432
- Portrait of a Man with Carnation (1435)
- Crucifixion c. 1430–1432
- Ince Hall Madonna (after 1434)
- Christ on the Cross with the Virgin and Saint John c. 1435
- Saint Jerome in His Study (1442)
- Hubert van Eyck (brother)