It's another lamb! OK - so sometimes I lack imagination!
This time instead of being a tiny part of a huge painting, this is a study - a drawing for a painting - but by who - and when?
Who painted this? #23 |
PLEASE make sure you read the rules before posting a comment - and ONLY POST ON THIS BLOG what you think is the answer.
Click this link to read THE RULES for participating in this challenge (this saves having to copy them out for each post!).
In short:
- use your brains not software to find the answer
- search using words only on a database of images
- leave your answer as a comment on this blog
- if correct it will not be published until the next post - which provides the answer
- if wrong it will be published
- do not leave the answer on Facebook!
- the winner - who gets a mention and a link on/from this blog - is the first person to give me a completely correct answer for ALL the things I want to know
Who Painted This #22 - The Answer
Lamb of God Part of the lower central panel of The Ghent Altarpiece: Adoration of the Lamb |
- Title of the artwork: The Ghent Altarpiece: Adoration of the Lamb
- Name of the artist who created this artwork: Jan van Eyck (c. 1390 - c. 1341)
- Date it was created: between 1425 and 1429
- Media used: oil on panel; Height: 137.7 cm (54.2 in). Width: 242.3 cm (95.4 in).
- Where it lives now: Saint Bavo Cathedral, Ghent
As you can see the Lamb of God forms a very small part of the Ghent Altarpiece.
The whole painting was started and probably designed by Hubert van Eyck. However he died and the majority of it is thought to have been painted by his younger brother Jan van Eyck.
The Wikipedia page about The Ghent Altarpiece provides a very detailed explanation of all the panels
The Ghent Altarpiece: Adoration of the LambJan van Eyck (c. 1390 - c. 1341) |
"Hubrecht van Eyck, the most famous painter ever known, started this work of art; his brother Jan, who was second in the art, finished the task at the request of Joos Vijd. With this verse the donor consigns the work to your charge on May 6th 1432. Admire what they have done for you".(Free translation of the quatrain on the polyptych)
What's very important about the Ghent Altarpiece is that it is one of the "great masterpieces of Western Civilisation" and is frequently cited as the first painting of the Renaissance. It forms part of the story of oil painting. The way Van Eyck rendered the subjects - including the use of transparent glazes - represented a new technique for the handling of oil paint
Those who would like to see The Ghent Altarpiece which the lamb is part of need look no further than Andrew Graham Dixon's new series of The High Art of the Low Countries - available to see on iPlayer or repeated on BBC4
The correct answers
Ka Grey provided a very comprehensive first correct answer. I always like it when the first one comes in comes from somebody who has very obviously enjoyed finding out about that week's painting! Very astute search query!
Well done to all the others who got the correct answer - who are as follows:
Starting his journey at the magnificent altarpiece of Ghent Cathedral created by the Van Eyck brothers, Andrew explains their groundbreaking innovation in oil painting and marvels at how the colours they obtained can still remain so vibrant today.
It's the most important painting in Belgium and is undergoing a major restoration at a cost of more than 1m euros (£800,000; $1.3m). This page on the Getty website tells you about some of the restoration processes. What is unique is that the restoration process was carried out int the cathedral itself.
It now resides behind bullet proof glass in a secure place within Ghent Cathedral.
You can find out more about the painting and its restoration from the following:
- Closer to Van Eyck: Rediscovering the Ghent Altarpiece - view the Altarpiece in incredible close-up due to new high resolution photography
- Belgium's Royal Institute for Cultural Heritage - Follow the restoration of the Ghent Altarpiece! (2012 - 2017)
- Codart - The Ghent Altarpiece in 100 billion pixels: unprecedented Imaging Project supported by the Getty Foundation reveals master work in minute detail — online
- New York Times / ArtsBeat - Ghent Altarpiece Gets Own Interactive Web Site
- BBC - Million-euro makeover for Belgium's Ghent Altarpiece
The correct answers
Ka Grey provided a very comprehensive first correct answer. I always like it when the first one comes in comes from somebody who has very obviously enjoyed finding out about that week's painting! Very astute search query!
Well done to all the others who got the correct answer - who are as follows:
- Alyson Champ
- Colours and Textures
- Sandra Robinson
- happyjacqui
- Charlotta Due (aka Pappersdraken = the paperdragon)
- Jean-Baptiste Pelardon
- Deborah Secor
I found this after searching for chalk, drawing, lamb, sheep.
ReplyDeleteTitle-Resting lamb and head of Lamb
Artist-Hans Holbein the younger
Date-1523
Size-20.6 × 24.6 cm
Medium-Brush over preliminary drawing in black crayon, with watercolour and some white heightening
Current location-Kunstmuseum Basel in Basel
This one took some figuring as I initially thought it was Rubens. "Study of lamb lying down" finally yielded results.
ReplyDeleteHans Holbein the Younger
Study of a Resting Lamb and Head of a Lamb
c. 1523
Black crayon and watercolour with white heightening
20.6x 24.6 cm
Kunstmuseum, Basel, Switzerland
Study of Resting Lamb and Head of Lamb
ReplyDeleteHans Holbein the Younger
c1523
Brush over preliminary drawing in black crayon, with watercolour and some white.
KunstMuseum Basel
Googled drawing study lamb, we found it on tomclarkblogspot.co.uk and wikimedia
This one was easy so I can't be the first.
ReplyDeleteI simply went with my first instinct and googled, 'watercolor study of lamb' and wa-la there it was, wikimedia commons
Title: "Study of Resting Lamb and Head of Lamb"
Artist: Hans Holbein the Younger
Date: c. 1523
Where it lives now: Kunstmuseum Basel
Media: Brush over preliminary drawing in black crayon, with watercolor and some white heightening (and some nice severe mould-staining)
... the challenge now is finding the painting for which this is a study.
ReplyDeleteI did a quick search, no luck yet.
Katherine, if we don't get that you will tell us won't you?
Maybe it should be for bonus points on these "who painted this?" studies...
...say, an extra $100.00 bucks!?