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Bruegel
Bruegel
The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists
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2003
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© The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists 2003, originally published by Oxford University Press 2003. (Hide copyright information)
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Bruegel (or Brueghel, Pieter) (
c.1525–69). Netherlandish painter, draughtsman, and printmaker, the greatest artist of his time in northern Europe. There is little documentary evidence concerning his career, but
van Mander's laudatory biography, published in 1604, is a useful source of information, even though it misleadingly projects an image of Bruegel as above all else a comic painter. Far from being the yokel of popular tradition—‘Peasant’ Bruegel—he seems to have been a man of some culture: his work includes memorable scenes of village life, but he spent his career in major cities rather than the countryside, he had distinguished patrons, and he was a friend of the eminent geographer Abraham Ortelius (who described him as ‘the most perfect painter of his century’). It is not known where Bruegel was born and there is no documentation on his life until 1550/1, when he is recorded in Malines, working on an altarpiece that is now lost. In 1551/2 he became a master in the painters' guild in Antwerp, where according to van Mander he had been the pupil of
Pieter Coecke van Aelst (who died in 1550); there is no stylistic affinity between their work, but Bruegel later married Coecke's daughter, so it is likely that he had links with her father. Soon after becoming a master, Bruegel made a lengthy visit to Italy, travelling as far south as Sicily. In Rome he met the miniaturist
Giulio Clovio, who bought several of his paintings. By 1555 he was back in Antwerp, designing engravings for the print publisher
Jerome Cock, who was his main source of employment for the next few years. The experience of crossing the Alps affected Bruegel much more than the example of any art he had seen in Italy, as was acknowledged by van Mander, who wrote that he ‘swallowed all the mountains and rocks and spat them out again, after his return, on to his canvases and panels’. His work for Cock included a series of prints now known as the
Twelve Large Landscapes (
c.1555–8), featuring wonderfully spacious mountain views. (Most of the drawings of Alpine scenery associated with Bruegel's visit to Italy—as well as many other drawings traditionally given to him—have recently been reattributed to Jacob and Roelandt
Savery, who perhaps made some of them as deliberate forgeries.) Bruegel's work for Cock also included figure compositions of various subjects, including parables like ‘Big Fish Eat Little Fish’. The engraving after Bruegel's drawing of this subject (published in 1557), bears the inscription ‘Hieronymus Bos Inventor’, an attempt by Cock to cash in on the continued popularity of
Bosch, whose moralistic outlook and sense of the grotesque influenced Bruegel considerably (he was indeed referred to in his lifetime as ‘a second Bosch’).
In 1563 Bruegel moved to Brussels and married there in that year. The move coincided with a change of direction in his career, for although he still made designs for engravings, he now worked primarily as a painter, and in the remaining six years of his short life he produced his best-known works. His patrons included Cardinal Granvelle, chief counsellor to Margaret of Parma (half-sister of Philip II (see
Habsburg) and his regent in the Netherlands), and the wealthy banker Niclaes Jonghelinck, who in 1565 commissioned the series of
The Months, of which five survive today. Three of these (including the celebrated
Hunters in the Snow) are in the remarkable collection of fourteen pictures by Bruegel in the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna, which comprises nearly one-third of his surviving output as a painter; the other two are in the Metropolitan Museum, New York, and the National Gallery, Prague. His style changed during this final period: he abandoned the crowded panoramas of his earlier years, making his figures bigger and bolder, as is seen most notably in his novel treatment of proverbs, a genre that had previously been of minor account (
The Blind Leading the Blind, 1568, Mus. di Capodimonte, Naples). Bruegel enjoyed a considerable reputation in his lifetime (he is mentioned by
Vasari and slightly later by
Lomazzo), and—through his original works and the many prints after them—he had an enormous influence on later Flemish painting, particularly landscape and
genre. It was not until the 20th century, however, that he was recognized also as a profound religious painter and an artist whose human sympathy and understanding have hardly been excelled. His two painter sons were infants when he died and so they had no training from him (they were reputedly taught by their grandmother—the widow of Pieter Coecke—Mayken Verhulst). Both sons spelled their surname ‘Brueghel’, retaining the letter ‘h’ that their father had dropped in about 1559.
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Bruegel: The Complete Paintings, Drawings and Prints.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly; 9/22/2008; ; 700+ words
; Manfred Sellink. Bruegel: The Complete Paintings, Drawings and Prints. The...have produced a useful tribute to the work of Pieter Bruegel. This latest volume reproduces all of Bruegel's known works: his paintings, drawings, and prints...
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Bruegel's Peasants: Art and Audience in the Northern Renaissance.
Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly; 9/22/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...1994. 74 illus. + x + 198 pp. $60. Bruegel scholars are in an unenviable position...the artist's least studied panels. "Bruegel appears to have invented a totally new...for his unique panel. Precisely because Bruegel's life and especially his trip to Italy...
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Pieter Bruegel the Elder: Drawings and Prints. .(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly; 6/22/2003; ; 700+ words
; Nadine M. Orenstein, ed. Pieter Bruegel the Elder: Drawings and Prints. (Exhibition...87099-991-5 (pbk). What did Pieter Bruegel the Elder (ca. 1525-69) create...question underlying a superb exhibition of Bruegel and Bruegelesque graphic works organized...
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Pieter Bruegel and the Art of Laughter.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly; 6/22/2007; ; 700+ words
; Walter S. Gibson. Pieter Bruegel and the Art of Laughter. Berkeley...powerful yet still puzzling work of Bruegel. Today's viewer cannot rely upon...knowledge of the environment in which Bruegel produced his art. This scholarship...
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Copiously Lurid Bruegel Demands Great Patience.(Arts&Entertainment)
Newspaper article from: The New York Observer (New York, NY); 10/8/2001; 700+ words
; ...approaching the splendid exhibition of Pieter Bruegel the Elder: Drawings and Prints, which...also characterizes as "the prolixity of Bruegel's imaginative details" presents us...the spirit, there is very little that Bruegel did not profoundly comprehend. Did he...
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Pieter Bruegel the Elder: Two studies.
Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly; 9/22/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...Kansas, 1991. 81 figs. + 95 pp. $12. Bruegel scholars are in an unenviable position...the artist's least studied panels. "Bruegel appears to have invented a totally new...for his unique panel. Precisely because Bruegel's life and especially his trip to Italy...
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Pieter Bruegel, pintor del Apocalipsis. (pintor honlandés)(TT: Pieter Brugel, Apocalypse painter) (TA: Dutch painter)
Magazine article from: Contenido; 10/1/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...vida, se es el caso del flamenco Pieter Bruegel, apodado "El Viejo" y nacido --se...1525 en una aldea llamada precisamente Bruegel, aunque en la actualidad no existe en...que s se sabe es que la existencia de Bruegel se dividi en 2 partes: en la primera...
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Arts: Survivors of the lost art An exhibition of the only remaining Pieter Bruegel drawings offers a new perspective on the artist. It's just a pity they are so few, says Tom Lubbock
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 6/16/2001; ; 700+ words
; Pieter Bruegel the Elder, though he seems like one of...itself is doubtful: Breughel, Brueghel, Bruegel - it rhymes more or less with "gurgle...and there must have been many more. Bruegel's great popularity is a recent, 20th...
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The Bruegel Legacy, Spelling Conceits Aside
Newspaper article from: International Herald Tribune; 2/7/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...blurred, hold this journalism up: Pieter Bruegel and sons at the Kunsthistorisches Museum...and in color on the walls here. It is Bruegel, magnificence from four centuries ago...copies of their father's work, by Pieter Bruegel the Elder's two sons (spelling conceits...
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Bruegel the Elder.
Magazine article from: New Criterion; 12/1/2001; ; 700+ words
; The exhibition of Bruegel the Elder's drawings and the engraved...one sheets that are surely by Pieter Bruegel the Elder himself. We can be grateful...certain sheets that were formerly called Bruegel the Elder by most art historians of my...
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Bruegel Family
Encyclopedia entry from: Europe, 1450 to 1789: Encyclopedia of the Early Modern World
BRUEGEL FAMILY BRUEGEL FAMILY. The Bruegels were a family of painters active from the mid...century through the seventeenth century, primarily in Antwerp. The Bruegel family employed many spelling variants of their name, as was common...
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Pieter Bruegel the Elder
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Pieter Bruegel the Elder Pieter Bruegel the Elder (c. 1525-1569) was a Netherlandish painter and...into man and his relationship to the world of nature. Pieter Bruegel lived at a time when northern art was strongly influenced by Italian...
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Bruegel
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists
Bruegel (or Brueghel, Pieter ) ( c. 1525...though it misleadingly projects an image of Bruegel as above all else a comic painter. Far...x2014;‘Peasant’ Bruegel—he seems to have been a man...
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Bruegel, Pieter the Elder
Book article from: The Oxford Dictionary of Art
Bruegel, Pieter the Elder (or Pieter Brueghel...x2014;‘Peasant’ Bruegel—he seems to have been a man...his own, but none of the villages called Bruegel is near Breda), and there is no documentation...
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Bruegel (the Elder), Pieter
Book article from: World Encyclopedia
Bruegel (the Elder), Pieter (1525–...illustrated proverbs. His son, Pieter Bruegel ( the Younger) (1564–1637...earned the nickname ‘Velvet Bruegel’ because of his skill in depicting...
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