Javascript must be enabled to continue!
The Holy Family
View through Europeana Collections
The Master of Frankfurt derives his name from the city in which his most important works are to be found. They comprise two altarpieces, one of The Holy Kinship of around 1505 painted for the Dominican church and now in the Historisches Museum, and the other a triptych of The Crucifixion commissioned by Claus Humbracht, a member of one of the city’s most influential families (now in the Städelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt). Attempts have been made to identify this anonymous artist with the painter Hendrik van Wueluwe, who was from the Woluwe region and is documented in Antwerp between 1483 and his death in 1533. Van Wueluwe occupied the position of dean of the painters’ guild in Antwerp on various occasions. The Master of Frankfurt, who had a very active workshop, is considered to have painted two celebrated works now in the Musée royal des Beaux-Arts Antwerp: Festival of the Archers of around 1493 and Portrait of the Artist and his Wife of 1496. In addition to the year of its execution, the latter painting also includes the ages of the figures, which has allowed the artist’s date of birth to be placed around 1460. In addition, it is one of the first double portraits to be painted in the Low Countries. The Master of Frankfurt’s style looked to traditional models developed by earlier generations of Flemish painters such as Rogier van der Weyden and Hugo van der Goes, while details from the Lower Rhine School are also evident to a lesser degree.
The Holy Family was in the Piérard collection in Valenciennes where it was catalogued as a work of the School of Van Eyck. In 1928 it was documented in the Hoogendijk collection, entering the Rohonz collection that same year, and in whose catalogues it appears from 1930.
The painting was first published by Friedländer who attributed it to the Master of Frankfurt, an attribution that has been retained to the present day. The composition depicts a tranquil episode from the childhood of Christ and incorporates various symbolic elements. Mary, with the Infant Christ on her knees, fills the centre of the composition with her frontal pose and majestic volume. Saint Joseph on one side, who is awkwardly inserted into the composition, offers Christ an apple in an overt reference to Original Sin and to Christ’s role as Redeemer. Despite the message that it conveys, the image is very much of its time with a new emphasis on the secular in the setting, the poses and the objects held by the figures. Mary holds some pinks in her hand, as does the Christ Child who also plays with a basket of roses whose red flowers refer to his future Passion. The artist does not fully dominate the recession of the planes into the pictorial depth, introducing the viewer into the composition through the thick carpet of leaves and flowers in the foreground that functions to emphasis the figures’ frontal presentation. Despite these inaccuracies, however, the Master of Frankfurt created a refined and elegant work. Among precedents for the composition Colin Eisler suggested the influence of Martin Schongauer’s print The Virgin and Child on a grassy Bench. Due to the presence of pentimenti in the underdrawing, Eisler considered that the present panel is an autograph work by the Master of Frankfurt. He rejected Goddard’s idea that it involves a high degree of workshop participation.
Mar Borobia
Title: The Holy Family
Description:
The Master of Frankfurt derives his name from the city in which his most important works are to be found.
They comprise two altarpieces, one of The Holy Kinship of around 1505 painted for the Dominican church and now in the Historisches Museum, and the other a triptych of The Crucifixion commissioned by Claus Humbracht, a member of one of the city’s most influential families (now in the Städelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt).
Attempts have been made to identify this anonymous artist with the painter Hendrik van Wueluwe, who was from the Woluwe region and is documented in Antwerp between 1483 and his death in 1533.
Van Wueluwe occupied the position of dean of the painters’ guild in Antwerp on various occasions.
The Master of Frankfurt, who had a very active workshop, is considered to have painted two celebrated works now in the Musée royal des Beaux-Arts Antwerp: Festival of the Archers of around 1493 and Portrait of the Artist and his Wife of 1496.
In addition to the year of its execution, the latter painting also includes the ages of the figures, which has allowed the artist’s date of birth to be placed around 1460.
In addition, it is one of the first double portraits to be painted in the Low Countries.
The Master of Frankfurt’s style looked to traditional models developed by earlier generations of Flemish painters such as Rogier van der Weyden and Hugo van der Goes, while details from the Lower Rhine School are also evident to a lesser degree.
The Holy Family was in the Piérard collection in Valenciennes where it was catalogued as a work of the School of Van Eyck.
In 1928 it was documented in the Hoogendijk collection, entering the Rohonz collection that same year, and in whose catalogues it appears from 1930.
The painting was first published by Friedländer who attributed it to the Master of Frankfurt, an attribution that has been retained to the present day.
The composition depicts a tranquil episode from the childhood of Christ and incorporates various symbolic elements.
Mary, with the Infant Christ on her knees, fills the centre of the composition with her frontal pose and majestic volume.
Saint Joseph on one side, who is awkwardly inserted into the composition, offers Christ an apple in an overt reference to Original Sin and to Christ’s role as Redeemer.
Despite the message that it conveys, the image is very much of its time with a new emphasis on the secular in the setting, the poses and the objects held by the figures.
Mary holds some pinks in her hand, as does the Christ Child who also plays with a basket of roses whose red flowers refer to his future Passion.
The artist does not fully dominate the recession of the planes into the pictorial depth, introducing the viewer into the composition through the thick carpet of leaves and flowers in the foreground that functions to emphasis the figures’ frontal presentation.
Despite these inaccuracies, however, the Master of Frankfurt created a refined and elegant work.
Among precedents for the composition Colin Eisler suggested the influence of Martin Schongauer’s print The Virgin and Child on a grassy Bench.
Due to the presence of pentimenti in the underdrawing, Eisler considered that the present panel is an autograph work by the Master of Frankfurt.
He rejected Goddard’s idea that it involves a high degree of workshop participation.
Mar Borobia.
Related Results
The Virgin and Child with Saint Elizabeth and Saint John the Baptist
The Virgin and Child with Saint Elizabeth and Saint John the Baptist
Within Rubens’ enormous output as a painter, which covered the principal pictorial genres (all of which he handled with equal skill), religious painting occupies a prominent positi...
The Holy Family, with Saint Elisabeth and the Infant Saint John the Baptist
The Holy Family, with Saint Elisabeth and the Infant Saint John the Baptist
The Holy Family with Saint Elizabeth and the Infant Saint John the
Baptist was dated by Thuiller to between 1653 and 1657. Anthony Blunt suggested a later date of around 1660–70,...
The Holy Family with Saints and Angels
The Holy Family with Saints and Angels
Joachim Wtewael was one of the leading representatives of the northern trend within Mannerist painting, among whose most important members were Cornelis Cornelisz. van Haarlem, Hen...
The Holy Family with Saint Anne and Saint John in a classical landscape; verso: The Holy Family with Saint Anne and Saint John
The Holy Family with Saint Anne and Saint John in a classical landscape; verso: The Holy Family with Saint Anne and Saint John
Pen and black and brown ink; verso: pen and black ink over a sketch in graphite...
Last Judgement
Last Judgement
The "Last Judgement" fresco at the Humor Monastery (in Suceava County, Romania)
was painted by Toma Zugravu (Thomas the Painter) of Suceava. It can be still viewed at the church...
Holy Bishopric of Morphou:Dedicatory inscription, Church of the Virgin Podithou in Galata
Holy Bishopric of Morphou:Dedicatory inscription, Church of the Virgin Podithou in Galata
The base of the pediment of the west facade of the church is delimited by a one-line inscription written in capital letters: THIS HOLY AND MOST SACRED CHURCH OF THE MORE THAN HOLY ...
Byzantine Museum of Holy Bishopric of Tamasos and Oreinis (Cyprus): Icon of Saint George (?) (TE2262)
Byzantine Museum of Holy Bishopric of Tamasos and Oreinis (Cyprus): Icon of Saint George (?) (TE2262)
Fragmentary icon depicting most probably Saint George. The martyr saint is represented as a young mounted warrior on a white horse, holding a shield and a lance and wearing a diade...
Portrait of a Seated Shaivite Holy Man with Prayer Beads
Portrait of a Seated Shaivite Holy Man with Prayer Beads
Facing right is a holy man seated cross-legged. He wear a large red turban and a white robe (jama). He has a dark, full beard. In his right hand he holds up prayer beads. The yello...


