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Hugo van der Goes The Fall : Adam and Eve Tempted by the Snake oil painting


The Fall : Adam and Eve Tempted by the Snake
Painting ID::  1804
Hugo van der Goes
The Fall : Adam and Eve Tempted by the Snake
1470 Art History Museum, Vienna

   
   
     

Hugo van der Goes The Portinari Altarpiece oil painting


The Portinari Altarpiece
Painting ID::  1805
Hugo van der Goes
The Portinari Altarpiece
1475 Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence

   
   
     

Hugo van der Goes Portrait of a Man  111 oil painting


Portrait of a Man 111
Painting ID::  1806
Hugo van der Goes
Portrait of a Man 111
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

   
   
     

Hugo van der Goes Adoration of the Shepherds oil painting


Adoration of the Shepherds
Painting ID::  10043
Hugo van der Goes
Adoration of the Shepherds
1480 Wood, 97 x 245 cm Staatliche Museen Berlin

   
   
     

Hugo van der Goes Adoration of the Shepherds  ry oil painting


Adoration of the Shepherds ry
Painting ID::  10044
Hugo van der Goes
Adoration of the Shepherds ry


   
   
     

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     Hugo van der Goes
     1440-1482 Flemish Hugo van der Goes Galleries Hugo became a member of the painters' guild of Ghent as a master in 1467. In 1468 he was involved in the decoration of the town of Bruges in celebration of the marriage between Charles the Bold and Margaret of York and he provided heraldic decorations for Charles's joyeuse entr??e to Ghent in 1469 and again in 1472. He was elected dean of the Ghent guild in 1473 or 1474. In 1475, or some years later, Hugo entered Rooklooster, a monastery near Brussels belonging to the Windesheim Congregation, and professed there as a frater conversus. He continued to paint, and remained at Rooklooster until his death in 1482 or 1483. In 1480 he was called to the town of Leuven to evaluate the Justice Scenes left unfinished by the painter Dieric Bouts on his death in 1475. Shortly after this, Hugo, returning with other members of his monastery from a trip to Cologne, fell into a state of suicidal gloom, declaring himself to be damned. After returning to Rooklooster, Hugo recovered from his illness, and died there. His time at Rooklooster is recorded in the chronicle of his fellow monk, Gaspar Ofhuys. A report by a German physician, Hieronymus M??nzer, from 1495, according to which a painter from Ghent was driven to melancholy by the attempt to equal the Ghent Altarpiece, may refer to Hugo. His most famous surviving work is the Portinari Triptych (Uffizi, Florence), an altarpiece commissioned for the church of San Egidio in the hospital of Santa Maria Nuova in Florence by Tommaso Portinari, the manager of the Bruges branch of the Medici Bank. The triptych arrived in Florence in 1483, apparently some years after its completion by van der Goes. The largest Netherlandish work that could be seen in Florence, it was greatly praised. Giorgio Vasari in his Vite of 1550 referred to it as by "Ugo d'Anversa" ("Hugo of Antwerp"). This the sole documentation for its authorship by Hugo; other works are attributed to him based on stylistic comparison with the altarpiece. Hugo appears to have left a large number of drawings, and either from these or the paintings themselves followers made large numbers of copies of compositions that have not survived from his own hand. A drawing of Jacob and Rachel preserved at Christ Church, Oxford is thought to be a rare surviving autograph drawing.

     Related Artists::.
     | Mitchell Ken | Jacques Charlier | Christian Friedrich Gille |


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