Émile Verhaeren: Essays on the Northern Renaissance: Rembrandt, Rubens, Grünewald and Others. Translated with an Introduction and Notes by Albert Alhadeff

Émile Verhaeren: Essays on the Northern Renaissance: Rembrandt, Rubens, Grünewald and Others. Translated with an Introduction and Notes by Albert Alhadeff

Author
Alhadeff, Albert
Publisher
Peter Lang Publishing Inc
Language
English
Edition
First printing
Year
2012
Page
182
ISBN
1433100118,978-1-4331-0011-6,978-1-4539-0868-6,1453908684
File Type
pdf
File Size
10.4 MiB

Émile Verhaeren (1855–1916), art critic, poet and homme de lettres, was a man whose vision transcended his native Belgium. With close ties to Mallarmé in France and Rilke in Germany, Verhaeren, a peripatetic student of the arts, readily traveled to Paris, Berlin, Cassel, Vienna and Amsterdam. From the mid-1880s until his death in 1916, his many trips abroad resulted in a raft of essays and short monographs on the arts of the Northern Renaissance. Yet, despite the insights, scholarship and markedly precise and revealing descriptions of these studies, they have long been neglected in art historical circles, overshadowed, perhaps, by Verhaeren’s own poetic outpourings and his numerous essays on contemporary art.
In this book, Albert Alhadeff translates, edits, annotates and contextualizes these often brilliant and always revealing studies on artists such as Rembrandt, Rubens, Memling, Bruegel and Grünewald, masters from the North who worked mostly in Flanders, Holland and Germany in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. As Alhadeff reveals, Verhaeren’s studies of the masters of old in Germany, Flanders and the newly born Dutch Republic are as much about Verhaeren the man as they are about the subjects of his inquiries.

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