Stefan Lochner: Image Making in Fifteenth-Century Cologne

The sumptuous paintings of Stefan Lochner (d. Cologne 1451) are among the most familiar yet least understood images of the late Middle Ages. His depictions of the Virgin and Child have entered the popular imagination as models of sweetness and grace, values superficially attached to them since their rediscovery two hundred years ago. Appreciation of Lochner's achievements has also been impeded by criticism that artificially judges him in terms of perceived realism. Both attitudes have blinded us to Lochner's creativity and invention.This book explores Lochner's oeuvre from various vantage points. Tracing current conceptions of the artist back to the earliest recorded testimonies, it first reviews Lochner's changing critical fortunes. A perceptual account of Lochner's major paintings and illuminated manuscripts follows, clarifying the artist's passion for the nature of representation and the different ways in which he engages the viewer. In addition, study of Lochner's works by means of infrared reflectography reveals a draftsman of the first order: his complex underdrawings foreshadow Martin Schongauer's graphic style of forty years later. Lochner's atelier and the different forms of collaboration that took place within it are the focus of a separate chapter. The book then identifies criteria in his images that contemporaries would have valued, such as his enduring engagement with the goldsmith's art, which typifies the manner in which his technical versatility enhanced the sensorial and emotive appeal of his images. An excursus examines painting in Cologne at the end of Lochner's career, while a catalogue provides basic information on all the paintings associated with Lochner and discusses the reflectography of most of them. The appendices contain Truus van Bueren's transcription and translation of all the known documents related to Lochner, the regulations of the Cologne painters' corporation, and Peter Klein's dendrochronological findings on Lochner's panels.The first monograph on Stefan Lochner since 1938, this book is richly illustrated with 69 color plates and 225 black-and-white reproductions; it includes a bibliography and index.

1100582024
Stefan Lochner: Image Making in Fifteenth-Century Cologne

The sumptuous paintings of Stefan Lochner (d. Cologne 1451) are among the most familiar yet least understood images of the late Middle Ages. His depictions of the Virgin and Child have entered the popular imagination as models of sweetness and grace, values superficially attached to them since their rediscovery two hundred years ago. Appreciation of Lochner's achievements has also been impeded by criticism that artificially judges him in terms of perceived realism. Both attitudes have blinded us to Lochner's creativity and invention.This book explores Lochner's oeuvre from various vantage points. Tracing current conceptions of the artist back to the earliest recorded testimonies, it first reviews Lochner's changing critical fortunes. A perceptual account of Lochner's major paintings and illuminated manuscripts follows, clarifying the artist's passion for the nature of representation and the different ways in which he engages the viewer. In addition, study of Lochner's works by means of infrared reflectography reveals a draftsman of the first order: his complex underdrawings foreshadow Martin Schongauer's graphic style of forty years later. Lochner's atelier and the different forms of collaboration that took place within it are the focus of a separate chapter. The book then identifies criteria in his images that contemporaries would have valued, such as his enduring engagement with the goldsmith's art, which typifies the manner in which his technical versatility enhanced the sensorial and emotive appeal of his images. An excursus examines painting in Cologne at the end of Lochner's career, while a catalogue provides basic information on all the paintings associated with Lochner and discusses the reflectography of most of them. The appendices contain Truus van Bueren's transcription and translation of all the known documents related to Lochner, the regulations of the Cologne painters' corporation, and Peter Klein's dendrochronological findings on Lochner's panels.The first monograph on Stefan Lochner since 1938, this book is richly illustrated with 69 color plates and 225 black-and-white reproductions; it includes a bibliography and index.

164.0 Out Of Stock
Stefan Lochner: Image Making in Fifteenth-Century Cologne

Stefan Lochner: Image Making in Fifteenth-Century Cologne

by Julien Chapuis
Stefan Lochner: Image Making in Fifteenth-Century Cologne

Stefan Lochner: Image Making in Fifteenth-Century Cologne

by Julien Chapuis

Hardcover

$164.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Temporarily Out of Stock Online
  • PICK UP IN STORE

    Your local store may have stock of this item.

Related collections and offers


Overview

The sumptuous paintings of Stefan Lochner (d. Cologne 1451) are among the most familiar yet least understood images of the late Middle Ages. His depictions of the Virgin and Child have entered the popular imagination as models of sweetness and grace, values superficially attached to them since their rediscovery two hundred years ago. Appreciation of Lochner's achievements has also been impeded by criticism that artificially judges him in terms of perceived realism. Both attitudes have blinded us to Lochner's creativity and invention.This book explores Lochner's oeuvre from various vantage points. Tracing current conceptions of the artist back to the earliest recorded testimonies, it first reviews Lochner's changing critical fortunes. A perceptual account of Lochner's major paintings and illuminated manuscripts follows, clarifying the artist's passion for the nature of representation and the different ways in which he engages the viewer. In addition, study of Lochner's works by means of infrared reflectography reveals a draftsman of the first order: his complex underdrawings foreshadow Martin Schongauer's graphic style of forty years later. Lochner's atelier and the different forms of collaboration that took place within it are the focus of a separate chapter. The book then identifies criteria in his images that contemporaries would have valued, such as his enduring engagement with the goldsmith's art, which typifies the manner in which his technical versatility enhanced the sensorial and emotive appeal of his images. An excursus examines painting in Cologne at the end of Lochner's career, while a catalogue provides basic information on all the paintings associated with Lochner and discusses the reflectography of most of them. The appendices contain Truus van Bueren's transcription and translation of all the known documents related to Lochner, the regulations of the Cologne painters' corporation, and Peter Klein's dendrochronological findings on Lochner's panels.The first monograph on Stefan Lochner since 1938, this book is richly illustrated with 69 color plates and 225 black-and-white reproductions; it includes a bibliography and index.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9782503505671
Publisher: Brepols Publishers
Publication date: 05/28/2004
Series: Me Fecit Series , #3
Pages: 340
Product dimensions: 8.44(w) x 11.98(h) x 1.16(d)

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsix
Introduction: A City and a Painter1
A Brief History of Cologne up to 13961
Municipal Government in Lochner's Time3
The Expulsion of the Jews3
The Social Standing of Painters4
Patronage5
Image Making6
Chapter IPerceptions of the Artist and His Work9
Early Collectors in Cologne9
The Rediscovery of the Dombild14
Recovering Stefan Lochner's Identity16
Defining Lochner's Oeuvre19
Appropriations21
The Historical Stefan Lochner26
"Maister Steffan zu Coln"28
Chapter IIBeyond the Christmas Card--Stefan Lochner, the Painter39
The "Last Judgment" Altarpiece41
"The Virgin with the Violet"55
"The Altarpiece of the City Patron Saints" (Dombild)58
The 1444 Berlin Book of Hours66
The 1445 Infancy Diptych69
The 1447 Darmstadt "Presentation in the Temple"79
"The Virgin in the Rose Bower"88
The 1451 Darmstadt Book of Hours94
Chapter IIIStefan Lochner, Master Draftsman103
Infrared Examination of Early Cologne Painting103
"The Virgin with the Flowering Pea" in Ottawa107
The Underdrawing of the "Last Judgment" Altarpiece109
The Underdrawing as a Graphic Document116
Underdrawing and the Creative Process119
The Underdrawing of the "Virgin with the Violet"126
The Underdrawing of the "Altarpiece of the City Patron Saints"126
Lochner's Late Graphic Style137
Underdrawing and Attribution145
The Legacy of Lochner's Graphic Style149
Chapter IVThe Workshop155
Circumstantial Evidence for Lochner's Workshop156
The Cologne Regulations and the Organization of Workshops157
Evidence of Collaboration in the "Last Judgment" Altarpiece and the Dombild160
Commissions for Paintings165
Division of Labor: The Nuremberg "Crucifixion" and the "Virgin in an Enclosed Garden" Triptych167
Drawings in Lochner's Workshop172
Drawings in Berlin and Paintings in Frankfurt and Cleveland178
The Munich "Nativity" and Related Drawings182
A Pupil of Lochner's?185
Chapter VThe Skilled Artist193
Netherlandish "Realism" and Its "Influence"193
Borrowing from Van Eyck199
Emulation207
External Inclusions211
Underdrawing and Drawing on Gold214
Goldsmiths and Their Works218
Subtractive Working Methods221
Stippling222
"Email en ronde-bosse"226
Paradoxes of Representation228
The Skilled Artist231
Excursus: The Heisterbach Altarpiece and Other Paintings from Midcentury239
Conclusion259
Catalogue of Stefan Lochner's Paintings and Related Works261
Appendices
Appendix IDocuments Related to Stefan Lochner293
Appendix IIRegulations of the Cologne Painters' Craft301
Appendix IIIDendrochronological Analyses of Panels of Stefan Lochner and His Circle308
Bibliography311
Index323
Photographic Credits331
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews