Canalblog Tous les blogs Top blogs Mode, Art & Design Tous les blogs Mode, Art & Design
Editer l'article Suivre ce blog Administration + Créer mon blog
MENU
Alain.R.Truong
Publicité
Alain.R.Truong
Publicité
Visiteurs
Depuis la création 51 884 237
Publicité
Archives
Newsletter
Alain.R.Truong
Publicité
18 juin 2026

Rogier van der Weyden

Attributed to Johannes Wierix (circa 1549–circa 1615), Portrait of Rogier van der Weyden from the Pictorum aliquot Germaniae Inferioris Effigies by Dominicus Lampsonius, 1572 © The Courtauld Institute of Art, London.

 

Rogier van der Weyden (dit en français Roger de Le Pasture), peintre appartenant au mouvement des primitifs flamands, est mort le 18 juin 1464 à Bruxelles.

 

Rogier van der Weyden (b. 1400, Tournai, d. 1464, Bruxelles), St Jerome and the Lion, c. 1450. Oil on oak panel, 31 x 25 cm © Institute of Arts, Detroit

 

The little painting actually shows two scenes from the life of this Doctor of the Church. In the foreground he uses a small instrument to take a thorn out of a lion's paw. In the background he is chastising himself. But unlike this latter episode, which goes back to a true fact in the saint's life, notably his penitential retreat into the wilderness as a hermit from 375 to 380, the taking off of his cardinal's clothes and beating his breast with a stone are fictitious. The legend that he was a cardinal, and that during a reading to his disciples in Bethlehem he was approached by a limping lion with a thorn in its paw, only originated in the thirteenth century. The canonical jurist Joannes Andreas of Bologna (c. 1330-1348) made use of this to propagate the cardinal's function and the lion as fixed attributes of St Jerome.

 

The composition of this painting has been altered in various places so that all conclusions which have hitherto been reached as to the authorship and the relationship to similar compositions need to be treated with caution. The lion was originally painted with both paws on the ground and with its head in profile, while Jerome's right arm pointed more in the direction of the book, which may originally have been a writing tablet. His hat also hung on his back and he was not lying on the ground. It is not possible to establish when these alterations took place. Judging by the scene in the background which also seems to have been added later, it might have been by a later, weaker hand. The work is unmistakably Rogierian in style, which also corresponds with the age of the panel. It is difficult to evaluate the extent to which the work has suffered in quality from the interventions of his studio.

 

Rogier van der Weyden (b. 1400, Tournai, d. 1464, Bruxelles), Portrait Diptych of Jean de Gros (right wing), 1450s. Oil on oak panel, 38,5 x 28,6 cm © Art Institute, Chicago

Rogier van der Weyden (b. 1400, Tournai, d. 1464, Bruxelles), Portrait Diptych of Philippe de Croy (right wing), c. 1460. Oil on oak panel, 49 x 30 cm © Koninklijk Museum voor Schone Kunsten, Antwerp

Rogier van der Weyden (b. 1400, Tournai, d. 1464, Bruxelles), Portrait Diptych of Laurent Froimont (right wing), 1460s. Oil on oak panel, 49,3 x 31,5 cm © Musées Royaux des Beaux-Arts, Brussels

Publicité
Commentaires
Publicité