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Thursday, October 13, 2011

#CHEAP Opening Doors: The Early Netherlandish Triptych Reinterpreted

Opening Doors: The Early Netherlandish Triptych Reinterpreted


Opening Doors: The Early Netherlandish Triptych Reinterpreted


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Opening Doors: The Early Netherlandish Triptych Reinterpreted Overview


Opening Doors is the first book of its kind: a comprehensive study of the emergence and evolution of the Netherlandish triptych from the early fifteenth through the early seventeenth century. The modern term 'triptych' did not exist during the period Jacobs discusses. Rather, contemporary French, Dutch, and Latin documents employ a very telling description--a 'painting with doors.' Using this term as her springboard, Jacobs considers its implications for the structure and meaning of the triptych. According to her reading, the fundamental nature of the format was to create doors that establish thresholds, boundaries, and interconnections between physical parts of the triptych--the center and wings, the interior and the exterior--and between types of meaning--the sacred and earthly, different narrative moments, different spaces, different levels of status, and, ultimately, different worlds. Moving chronologically from early triptychs such as Campin's Merode Triptych and Van Eyck's Dresden Triptych to sixteenth-century works by Bosch, and closing with a discussion of Rubens, Jacobs considers how artists negotiated the idea of the threshold. From her analysis of Campin's ambiguous divisions between the space represented across the panels, to Van der Weyden's invention of the 'arch motif' that organized relations between the viewer and the painting, to Van der Goes's complex hierarchical structures, to Bosch's unprecedentedly unified spaces, Jacobs shows us how Netherlandish artists' approach to the format changed and evolved, culminating in the early seventeenth century with Rubens's great Antwerp altarpieces.