BLES, Herri met de - b. ~1510 Bouvignes, d. ~1566 ? - WGA

BLES, Herri met de

(b. ~1510 Bouvignes, d. ~1566 ?)

Netherlandish painter of landscapes with figures. He is an enigmatic figure presumed to be one and the same as the Herri Patenier who entered the Antwerp Guild in 1535. Herri met de Bles, as van Mander informs us, is simply a nickname meaning ‘Herri with the white forelock’, and it is generally assumed that he was a relation of Joachim Patenier, who certainly had a decisive influence on his work. No signed or documented work by Herri exists, but a small group of distinctive works has been ascribed to him, characterized by panoramic landscapes dominating the figure groups in the manner of Patenier. His work was popular with Italian collectors, who called him ‘Civetta’ (little owl) because he often included owls in his pictures.

Christ Carrying the Cross
Christ Carrying the Cross by

Christ Carrying the Cross

In this composition the landscape fills the picture space and the events related to the Road to Calvary are integrated in this. The route begins at the town on the left - signifying Jerusalem - through a hilltop village, then the winding path leads to the place of crucifixion in the distant background.

Christ's Calling to St Peter
Christ's Calling to St Peter by

Christ's Calling to St Peter

This drawing depicting Jesus, Peter and the other disciples in their boat is one of a series of drawings in the so-called ‘Antwerp Sketchbook’. Bles’s authorship of the drawings has been contested, but five relate directly to panels by him, and it is now thought that they are the work of a hand or hands in his circle or workshop. The drawing seems to have been the basis for a group of seven panel paintings of this subject by Bles.

Elijah Ascending to Heaven in the Fiery Chariot
Elijah Ascending to Heaven in the Fiery Chariot by

Elijah Ascending to Heaven in the Fiery Chariot

The painting is signed with the artist’s device of an owl at the base of the tree at the centre.

Extensive Coastal Landscape with the Calling of St Peter
Extensive Coastal Landscape with the Calling of St Peter by

Extensive Coastal Landscape with the Calling of St Peter

The subject of the painting is taken from the Gospel of St John, (XXI, 6–10); the figures enacting it are typically set in an immense vista, dwarfed by the towering, fantastical bluffs and buildings above and beyond them. In the foreground on the edge of Lake Galilee, Christ appears to his disciples for the third time following his resurrection. St Peter is seen trying to reach Him across the waves, while to the right the figures appear again in a slightly later episode gathering to grill the fish they have just miraculously caught. The remarkable eagle-shaped overhang in the rocks may be intended as a symbol of the Evangelist and thus refers to de Bles’s biblical source. Upon it may be spied a small owl sitting in a cleft, a pun on the painter’s nickname (civetta in Italian) and his frequent form of signature.

The panel is signed on the rocky bluff with the artist’s device of an owl, and inscribed on an old label affixed to the reverse: Del Civetta.

Extensive Coastal Landscape with the Calling of St Peter (detail)
Extensive Coastal Landscape with the Calling of St Peter (detail) by

Extensive Coastal Landscape with the Calling of St Peter (detail)

In the foreground on the edge of Lake Galilee, Christ appears to his disciples for the third time following his resurrection. St Peter is seen trying to reach Him across the waves.

The remarkable eagle-shaped overhang in the rocks may be intended as a symbol of the Evangelist and thus refers to de Bles’s biblical source. Upon it may be spied a small owl sitting in a cleft, a pun on the painter’s nickname (civetta in Italian) and his frequent form of signature.

Extensive Coastal Landscape with the Calling of St Peter (detail)
Extensive Coastal Landscape with the Calling of St Peter (detail) by

Extensive Coastal Landscape with the Calling of St Peter (detail)

This detail shows the episode of gathering to grill the fish they have just miraculously caught.

Extensive Coastal Landscape with the Calling of St Peter (detail)
Extensive Coastal Landscape with the Calling of St Peter (detail) by

Extensive Coastal Landscape with the Calling of St Peter (detail)

In the foreground on the edge of Lake Galilee, Christ appears to his disciples for the third time following his resurrection. St Peter is seen trying to reach Him across the waves.

The remarkable eagle-shaped overhang in the rocks may be intended as a symbol of the Evangelist and thus refers to de Bles’s biblical source. Upon it may be spied a small owl sitting in a cleft, a pun on the painter’s nickname (civetta in Italian) and his frequent form of signature.

Extensive Coastal Landscape with the Calling of St Peter (detail)
Extensive Coastal Landscape with the Calling of St Peter (detail) by

Extensive Coastal Landscape with the Calling of St Peter (detail)

This detail shows the episode of gathering to grill the fish they have just miraculously caught.

Fantastical Moonlit Landscape
Fantastical Moonlit Landscape by

Fantastical Moonlit Landscape

This panel depicts a fantastical moonlit landscape with St. Christopher carrying the Christ Child across a river. In the centre the painter has placed a large rock in silhouette, its opacity accentuated by the brightness of the landscape that shines through the peculiarly eroded tunnels at its base. It is a partly anthropomorphic formation, something that we see in varying forms throughout the artist’s oeuvre.

Landscape with Christ and the Men of Emmaus
Landscape with Christ and the Men of Emmaus by

Landscape with Christ and the Men of Emmaus

Herri met de Bles was, together with Joachim Patenier, the Low Countries’ first landscape painter.

Landscape with the Banishment of Hagar
Landscape with the Banishment of Hagar by

Landscape with the Banishment of Hagar

Landscape with the Flight into Egypt
Landscape with the Flight into Egypt by

Landscape with the Flight into Egypt

Landscape with the Repudiation of Hagar and Ishmael
Landscape with the Repudiation of Hagar and Ishmael by

Landscape with the Repudiation of Hagar and Ishmael

In the sixteenth century, Old Testament’s sacred texts inspired painters by allowing them to illustrate scenes that had never been portrayed until then. The illustration of the Scriptures gradually became a pretext for the creation of vast exotic landscapes teeming with forests, mountains and rivers.

Road to Calvary
Road to Calvary by

Road to Calvary

Herri met de Bles was a significant contributor to the tradition of landscape painting. One of his largest landscapes appears as the setting for the Road to Calvary, now in Princeton. The subject is immersed within a spectacular landscape. The foreground procession of people who stream from the giant turreted gate of Jerusalem is minuscule, and within the city walls the artist scatters more tiny figures, who act out the various episodes of the Passion.

In contrast to the procedure of the early landscapists, met de Bles’s procedure was first to sketch the layout of the landscape omitting figures entirely, to assure a unity and totality to the view. The figures were added later. In this painting, like in his other landscapes, the painter thought in terms of a landscape with figures and not figures in a landscape.

The Copper Mine
The Copper Mine by

The Copper Mine

Responding to the enormous trade in metals by South German banking families in Antwerp, Herri met de Bles painted several images depicting miners at work deep in the mountains. Here, like in his other landscapes, the painter thought in terms of a landscape with figures and not figures in a landscape.

The Paradise
The Paradise by

The Paradise

The painter based his depiction of the Paradise on the opening page of the Bible translated by Luther and decorated with woodcuts by Lucas Cranach. Several of the small scenes, such as the creation of Eve and the expulsion from Paradise, were also taken from Cranach’s Bible illustrations. The little roundel stands out for the description of the landscape. Herri met de Bles worked as a true miniaturist by including flowers, plants and animals in the microcosm of this painting.

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