Petrus Christus

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Portrait of a young girl
Petrus Christus, circa 1460
Oil on wood
29 × 22,5 cm
Staatliche Museen, Berlin

Petrus Christus (1410/14201475/76) was a Flemish painter active in Bruges from 1444.

Christus was born in Baarle-Hertog, Antwerp. A student of and successor to Jan van Eyck, his paintings have sometimes been confused with Van Eyck's. At the death of Van Eyck in 1441, he took over his master's workshop. Recent research reveals Christus, long seen only in his great master's light, as an independent painter whose work shows clear influences from, among others, Dirk Bouts, Robert Campin and Rogier van der Weyden.

It is still unknown whether Christus visited Italy, and brought the style and technical accomplishments of the greatest Northern European painters directly to Antonello da Messina and other Italian artists, or whether his paintings were purchased by Italians. The composition of a Lamentation now at the Metropolitan Museum of Art so closely inspired a marble relief by Antonello Gagini in the cathedral at Palermo that it has been suggested that the picture may have been painted for an Italian client.[1]

The reserved Portrait of a Young Girl (illustration, right) belongs among the masterworks of Flemish painting, marking a new development phase in Netherlandish portrait art. It no longer shows the sitter in front of an indefinite backgrond, but in a concrete space defined by the wall panels. The unknown woman, whose exquisite clothing suggests that she might come from France, radiates an aura of discretion and of nobility, while appearing slightly unreal in the elegant stylization of her form.

Christus died in Bruges in 1475 or 1476.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ "The Lamentation". Metmuseum.org. Retrieved 22 March 2007.

[edit] Further reading

[edit] External link

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