- Antwerp school
The Antwerp School is a term for the artists active in
Antwerp , first during the sixteenth century when the city was the economic center of theLow Countries , and then during the seventeenth century when it became the artistic stronghold of the Flemish Baroque underPeter Paul Rubens .History
Antwerp took over from
Bruges as the main trading and commercial center of theLow Countries around1500 . Painters, artists and craftsmen joined theGuild of Saint Luke , which educated apprentices and guaranteed quality.The first school of artists that emerged in the city were the Antwerp Mannerists, a group of anonymous late Gothic painters active in the city from about 1500 to 1520. They were followed by Mannerist painters in the Italian tradition that developed at the end of the
High Renaissance .Jan Mabuse was a major artist in the city at this time. Other artists, such asFrans Floris , continued this style.The iconoclastic riots ('Beeldenstorm' in Dutch) of
1566 that preceded theDutch Revolt resulted in the destruction of many works of religious art, after which time the churches and monasteries had to be refurnished and redecorated. Artists such asOtto van Veen and members of theFrancken family, working in a late mannerist style, provided new religious decoration. It also marked a beginning of economic decline in the city, as theScheldt river was blockaded by theDutch Republic in1585 and trade diminished.The city experienced an artistic renewal in the seventeenth century. The large workshops of
Peter Paul Rubens andJacob Jordaens , and the influence ofAnthony van Dyck , made Antwerp the center of the Flemish Baroque. The city was an internationally significant publishing centre, and had a huge production ofold master print s and book illustrations. Antwerp "animaliers" or animal painters, such asFrans Snyders ,Jan Fyt andPaul de Vos dominated this speciality in Europe for at least the first half of the century. Many artists joined theGuild of Romanists , a society for which having visited Rome was a condition of membership. But as the economy continued to decline, and theHabsburg Governors and the Church reduced their patronage, many artists trained in Antwerp left for the Netherlands, England, France or elsewhere, and by the end of the 17th century Antwerp was no longer a major centre for art.The artistic legacy of Antwerp is represented in many museums, and paintings of the Antwerp School are successful at auctions.
Antwerp School Artists
ixteenth Century
*
Pieter Aertsen
*Paul Bril
*Pieter Bruegel the Elder
*Joos van Cleve
*Gillis van Coninxloo
*Frans Floris
*Ambrosius Francken the Elder
*Frans Francken the Elder
*Hieronymus Francken the Elder
*Lucas de Heere
*Jan Sanders van Hemessen
*Jan Matsys
*Quentin Matsys
*Joos de Momper
*Jan Mabuse
*Adam van Noort
*Joachim Patinir
*Frans Pourbus the Elder
*Frans Pourbus the Younger
*Bartholomeus Spranger
*Otto van Veen
*Marten de Vos eventeenth Century
*
Hendrick van Balen
*Pieter Boel
*Adriaen Brouwer
*Jan Brueghel the Elder
*Jan Brueghel the Younger
*Pieter Brueghel the Younger
*Gaspard de Crayer
*Abraham van Diepenbeeck
*Anthony van Dyck
*Frans Francken the Younger
*Jan Fyt
*Jacob Jordaens
*Erasmus Quellinus
*Peter Paul Rubens
*Jan Siberechts
*Frans Snyders
*David Teniers the Younger
*Theodoor van Thulden
*Adriaen van Utrecht
*Cornelis de Vos
*Paul de Vos
*Jan Wildens
*Thomas Willeboirts Bosschaert
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.