BELLANGE, Jacques - b. 1594 Nancy, d. 1638 Nancy - WGA

BELLANGE, Jacques

(b. 1594 Nancy, d. 1638 Nancy)

French painter, etcher and decorator, active in the Duchy of Lorraine. His reputation now rest on his etchings and drawings, as all his decorative work and almost all his paintings disappeared. His highly individual style represents a last stage of the development of Mannerist art in Europe. Exaggerating the tradition initiated by Parmigianino, he expressed a personal religious mysticism through the artificial conventions of aristocratic elegance.

Hurdy-Gurdy Player
Hurdy-Gurdy Player by

Hurdy-Gurdy Player

Bellange’s most important works all deal with religious themes; but he also designed a few genre compositions of which the most remarkable is the Hurdy-Gurdy Player. Here Bellange shows an interest, exceptional for him, in the ugliness and deformity of the blind beggar; but there is nothing unusual in this simultaneous inclination towards the opposite extremes of elegance and repulsiveness.

Lamentation
Lamentation by

Lamentation

This is one of the few surviving paintings by Jacques Bellange, founder of the Lotharingian school of painting, who worked at the court of dukes Charles III and Henry II of Lorraine. The painting is a rare example of French Mannerism in religious art. The fanciful interlacing of zigzag lines and the sharp contrasts of light and shade intensify the sense of mental anguish evident even in the face of the donor, on the right (perhaps a portrait of Bellange’s ducal patron).

The Annunciation
The Annunciation by

The Annunciation

In his etchings sometimes Bellange deliberately makes the space vague, as in the great Annunciation.

The Three Marys at the Tomb
The Three Marys at the Tomb by

The Three Marys at the Tomb

Bellange worked as a painter, designer of masques and graphic artist at the ducal Court at Nancy in the early years of the 17th century. Several dozen surviving drawings and a limited number of etchings testify to his brilliance in these media and show why he was held in such esteem by his patrons.

Out of varied Italian and Flemish elements Bellange created a style which is intensely personal and which can be seen at its best in the etching of the Three Marys at the Sepulchre. The most immediately striking characteristics of the etching are the strange poses and forms of the three women, their long, sweeping draperies, their swan necks and tiny heads with hair strained up from the nape of the neck, and their elongated nervous fingers. The forms are those of a hyper-sophisticated court society, but the neuroticism which they display has taken a religious form, as it often did at the time of the Counter-Reformation.

To create the mysterious atmosphere of his compositions Bellange uses every trick known to his predecessors. In the Three Marys, for instance, he places the three principal figures in the very foreground, but turns them round so that they all face away from the spectator and into the composition. He chooses a viewpoint so high that the ground is tipped up, and the spectator seems to be looking down on the principal figures. Bellange has sought other effects of surprise in a spirit very typical of a Mannerist; for instance, he has chosen the unusual course of representing the action as seen from the inside of the cave, and has broken the unity of time by showing the Marys twice over, once in the foreground and again in the mouth of the cave in the background.

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