Word: flemish
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Flemish paintings now on exhibition at the Fogg Art Museum form one of the most notable collections which have been brought together at Harvard. They follow the history of the art of Flanders from the beginnings of the Renaissance until it was superseded by Italian ideals in the middle of the sixteenth century. There are examples of nearly every Flemish master during this period--Mabuse, van der Weyden, Memlic and their contemporaries. These pictures compare interestingly with the Italian artists in the same room. The Southern painters strive for idealism and for decorative perfection. The Flemings care more for reality...
Professor George Harold Edgell '09, of the Fine Arts Department, will hold a conference on the exhibition of Flemish paintings in the Fogg Art Museum tomorrow at 3.30 o'clock. This conference will be open to the public. The paintings will remain at the Museum until Wednesday, November 29. They cover, in an unusual way, the field of early Flemish paintings and works are being shown of such masters as Roger van der Weyden, Memlinc, Mabuse, Hugo van der Goes and Moro...
...special loan exhibition of Flemish paintings which was opened at the Fogg Art Museum on Wednesday, will continue for a period of two weeks. This important exhibition covers, in an unusual way, the field of early Flemish painting, and examples are being shown from the paintings of such masters as Roger van der Weyden, Memlinc, Mabuse, Hugo van der Goes, Moro and others...
Beginning November 15, and continuing for a period of two weeks, a special loan exhibition of Flemish paintings will be held at the Fogg Art Museum. The exhibition is intended to cover, in an unusual way, the field of early Flemish painting, and examples will be shown of such masters as Roger van der Weyden, Memlinc, Mabuse, Hugo van der Goes, Moro and others...
...Fogg Art Museum is now showing as a temporary loan a beautiful Flemish triptych, attributed to Marcellus Koffermans, who, in 1549, was admitted as free master into the Guild of St. Luke at Antwerp. One of his paintings, the "Mystical Marriage of St. Catherine," is dated 1568, and it is likely that the triptych, now on exhibition was painted at about that time. Other pictures by the master are to be found in the Museums of Brussels and Berlin...