GRÜNEWALD, Matthias - b. ~1475 Würzburg, d. 1528 Halle - WGA

GRÜNEWALD, Matthias

(b. ~1475 Würzburg, d. 1528 Halle)

Matthias Grünewald (original name Mathis Gothardt Neithardt), one of the greatest German painters of his age, whose works on religious themes achieve a visionary expressiveness through intense colour and agitated line. The wings of the altarpiece of the Antonite monastery at Isenheim, in southern Alsace (dated 1515), are considered to be his masterpiece.

Although it is commonly agreed that Master Mathis was born in the German city of Würzburg, the date of his birth remains problematic. The first securely dated work by Grünewald (a name fabricated by Sandrart who published the first biography of the artist in 1675 but it is now hallowed by usage), the Mocking of Christ of 1503 (Alte Pinakothek, Munich), seems to be that of a young man just become a master. Grünewald appears first in documents of about 1500 either in the town of Seligenstadt am Main or Aschaffenburg. By about 1509 Grünewald had become court painter and later the leading art official (his title was supervisor or clerk of the works) to the elector of Mainz, the archbishop Uriel von Gemmingen.

About 1510 Grünewald received a commission from the Frankfurt merchant Jacob Heller to add two fixed wings to the altarpiece of the Assumption of the Virgin recently completed by the painter Albrecht Dürer. These wings depicting four saints are painted in grisaille (shades of gray) and already show the artist at the height of his powers. Like Grünewald’s drawings, which are done primarily in black chalk with some yellow or white highlighting, the Heller wings convey colouristic effects without the use of colour. Expressive hands and active draperies help blur the boundaries between cold stone and living form.

About 1515 Grünewald was entrusted with the largest and most important commission of his career. Guido Guersi, an Italian preceptor, or knight, who led the religious community of the Antonite monastery at Isenheim (in southern Alsace), asked the artist to paint a series of wings for the shrine of the high altar that had been carved in about 1505 by Nikolaus Haguenauer of Strasbourg. The subject matter of the wings of the Isenheim Altarpiece provided Grünewald’s genius with its fullest expression and was based largely on the text of the popular, mystical Revelations of St Bridget of Sweden (written about 1370).

The Isenheim Altarpiece, which is now in the Unterlinden Museum in Colmar, France, consists of a carved wooden shrine with one pair of fixed and two pairs of movable wings flanking it. Grünewald’s paintings on these large wing panels consist of the following. The first set of panels depicts the Crucifixion, the Lamentation, and portraits of St Anthony and St Sebastian. The second set focuses on the Virgin Mary, with scenes of the Annunciation and a Concert of Angels and Nativity, and the Resurrection. The third set of wings focuses on St Anthony, with St Anthony and St Paul in the Desert and the Temptation of St Anthony.

The altarpiece’s figures are given uniquely determined gestures, their limbs are distended for expressive effect, and their draperies (a trademark of Grünewald’s that expand and contract in accordion pleats) mirror the passions of the soul. The colours used are simultaneously biting and brooding. The Isenheim Altarpiece expresses deep spiritual mysteries. The Concert of Angels, for instance, depicts an exotic angel choir housed within an elaborate baldachin. At one opening of the baldachin a small, glowing female form, the eternal and immaculate Virgin, kneels in adoration of her own earthly manifestation at the right. And at the far left of the same scene under the baldachin, a feathered creature, probably the evil archangel Lucifer, adds his demonic notes to the serenade. Other details in the altarpiece, including the horribly wounded body of Christ in the Crucifixion, may refer to the role of the monastery as a hospital for victims of the plague and St Anthony’s fire. The colour red takes on unusual power and poignancy in the altarpiece, first in the Crucifixion, then in the Annunciation and Nativity, and finally on Christ’s shroud in the Resurrection, which is at first lifeless in the cold tomb but which then smolders and bursts into white-hot flame as Christ ascends, displaying his tiny purified red wounds. Such transformations of light and colour are perhaps the most spectacular found in German art until the late 19th century. And through all this drama, Grünewald never misses the telling picturesque detail: a botanical specimen, a string of prayer beads, or a crystal carafe.

Another important clerical commission came from a canon in Aschaffenburg, Heinrich Reitzmann. As early as 1513 he had asked Grünewald to paint an altar for the Mariaschnee Chapel in the Church of SS. Peter and Alexander in Aschaffenburg. The artist painted this work in the years 1517-19. Grünewald apparently married about 1519, but the marriage does not appear to have brought him much happiness (at least, that is the tradition recorded in the 17th century). Grunewald occasionally added his wife’s surname, Neithardt, to his own, thereby accounting for several documentary references to him as Mathis Neithardt or Mathis Gothardt Neithardt.

In 1514 Uriel von Gemmingen had died, and Albrecht von Brandenburg had become the elector of Mainz. For Albrecht, Grünewald executed one of his most luxurious works, portraying The Meeting of SS. Erasmus and Maurice (Erasmus is actually a portrait of Albrecht) that is now in the Alte Pinakothek in Munich. This work exhibits the theme of religious discussion or debate, so important to this period of German art and history. In this painting, as well as in the late, two-sided panel known as the Tauberbischofsheim Altarpiece (Staatliche Kunsthalle, Karlsruhe), Grünewald’s forms become more massive and compact, his colours restrained but still vivid.

Apparently because of his sympathy with the Peasants’ Revolt of 1525, Grünewald left Albrecht’s service in 1526. He spent the last two years of his life visiting in Frankfurt and Halle, cities sympathetic to the newly emerging Protestant cause. In Halle he was involved in supervising the town waterworks. Grünewald died in August 1528; among his effects were discovered several Lutheran pamphlets and documents.

Grünewald’s painterly achievement remains one of the most striking in the history of northern European art. His 10 or so paintings (some of which are composed of several panels) and approximately 35 drawings that survive have been jealously guarded and carefully scrutinized in modern times. His dramatic and intensely expressive approach to subject matter can perhaps best be observed in his three other extant paintings of the Crucifixion (in Basle, in Washington and in Karlsruhe), which echo the Isenheim Altarpiece in their depiction of the scarified and agonized body of Christ.

Despite his artistic genius, failure and confusion no doubt marked much of Grünewald’s life. He seems not to have had a real pupil, and his avoidance of the graphic media also limited his influence and renown. Grünewald’s works did continue to be highly prized, but the man himself was almost forgotten by the 17th century. The German painter Joachim von Sandrart, the artist’s fervent admirer and first biographer (Teutsche Akademie, 1675), was responsible for preserving some of the scanty information that we have about the artist, as well as naming him, erroneously and from an obscure source, Grünewald. At the lowest ebb of his popularity, in the mid-19th century, Grünewald was labeled by German scholarship “a competent imitator of Dürer.” However, the late 19th-century and early 20th-century artistic revolt against rationalism and naturalism, typified by the German Expressionists, led to a thorough and scholarly reevaluation of the artist’s career. Grünewald’s art is now recognized as an often painful and confused but always highly personal and inspired response to the turmoil of his times.

An Apostle from the Transfiguration
An Apostle from the Transfiguration by

An Apostle from the Transfiguration

An Apostle from the Transfiguration
An Apostle from the Transfiguration by

An Apostle from the Transfiguration

Annunciation and Resurrection
Annunciation and Resurrection by

Annunciation and Resurrection

The picture shows the left and right wings of the second view of the Isenheim Altarpiece.

Gr�newald’s unsurpassed technique in painting coloured light is epitomized in the figure of the rising Christ; his dramatic use of writhing forms in movement is also seen here in the figures of Christ, the arriving angel, and the Madonna.

Benefactor with Bird Cage
Benefactor with Bird Cage by

Benefactor with Bird Cage

Carrying the Cross
Carrying the Cross by

Carrying the Cross

This is one of the panels of the two-part altarpiece originally in the church at Tauberbischofsheim. The Carrying the Cross was seen from the direction of the choir while the other part, the Crucifixion, from the nave.

Carrying the Cross (detail)
Carrying the Cross (detail) by

Carrying the Cross (detail)

Complaining Pharisee
Complaining Pharisee by

Complaining Pharisee

Concert of Angels (detail)
Concert of Angels (detail) by

Concert of Angels (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, second view: detail of the central panel.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 4 minutes):

C�sar Franck: Panis angelicus

Concert of Angels (detail)
Concert of Angels (detail) by

Concert of Angels (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, second view: detail of the central panel (dark angel).

Concert of Angels (detail)
Concert of Angels (detail) by

Concert of Angels (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, second view: detail of the central panel.

Concert of Angels and Nativity
Concert of Angels and Nativity by

Concert of Angels and Nativity

This panel, also known as “Concert of Angels and Mary in Glory”, is the central panel of the second view of the Isenheim Altarpiece. In the iconography relating to Mary, the concert of angels can accompany the Glorification as well as the Nativity.

The musician angels are crowded into the Gothic chapel which fills the left half of the painting. In fact only three of them have instruments in their hands, and only one of them stands out, a blond-haired angel dressed in pale violet robe kneeling and playing the viola da gamba. His exalted expression and his beautiful instrument, however, fill the entire picture with music. The peculiar position of his hand, the way he holds the bow at the wrong end, is certainly not in accordance with contemporary practice; it is merely a compositional solution employed by the master. Behind him we can see one of his mates playing the viola da braccio, and on the left, behind the column, another bird-like, feather-covered angel who also plays the viola da gamba. Gr�newald no longer makes the distinction between the nine orders of angels, but refers to their former hierarchy by depicting them as different.

A long-haired female figure, wearing a crown and surrounded by a halo, appears in the doorway of the chapel. She is perhaps a female saint or, according to more recent interpretations, Mary herself before giving birth. The crystal jug on the steps symbolizes her, and the tub and towel refer to the bath to be given the newborn.

Mary, lovingly embracing her child, occupies the right half of the painting. She is flooded with heavenly light originating from God the Father, in which angels flutter around. In the rear on the right we can see the two angels bearing the news to the shepherds. The garden in which Mary sits is a walled-in “hortus conclusus” (enclosed garden) with closed gates. The plants - the rose and the Tree of the Knowledge, the fig tree - also symbolizes Mary.

This altarpiece inspired Paul Hindemith, one of the most significant German composers of the 20th century, to create his opera and symphony entitled “Mathis the Painter”.

Concert of Angels and Nativity (detail)
Concert of Angels and Nativity (detail) by

Concert of Angels and Nativity (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, second view: detail of the central panel.

Crucifixion
Crucifixion by
Drapery Study
Drapery Study by

Drapery Study

The drawing is probably a study for one of the Apostles of the Transfiguration in Frankfurt.

Establishment of the Santa Maria Maggiore in Rome
Establishment of the Santa Maria Maggiore in Rome by

Establishment of the Santa Maria Maggiore in Rome

The painting was the right panel of the altarpiece in the Abbey Church at Aschaffenburg, near Bad Mergentheim.

According to tradition, Pope Liberius (pope from 352 to 366) and a patrician had the same dream at the same night. The Virgin appeared and expressed her wish to raise a church at the site which she will mark by snow at the middle of the summer. Next day the Esquiline hill was covered by snow and it became the site of the church of Santa Maria Maggiore.

The altarpiece is called the Altarpiece of the Our Lady of the Snow.

Establishment of the Santa Maria Maggiore in Rome (detail)
Establishment of the Santa Maria Maggiore in Rome (detail) by

Establishment of the Santa Maria Maggiore in Rome (detail)

The detail shows Pope Liberius who, according to tradition, established the Santa Maria Maggiore on the Esquiline hill in Rome.

Establishment of the Santa Maria Maggiore in Rome (detail)
Establishment of the Santa Maria Maggiore in Rome (detail) by

Establishment of the Santa Maria Maggiore in Rome (detail)

The detail shows the wife of the patrician.

Establishment of the Santa Maria Maggiore in Rome (detail)
Establishment of the Santa Maria Maggiore in Rome (detail) by

Establishment of the Santa Maria Maggiore in Rome (detail)

The detail shows the background of the painting. The palace at the left has no wall and the dreaming pope can be seen in his bedroom. At the steps of the palace the patrician and his wife view the Mother of God in snow-white glory in the sky. On the right, in front of the Lateran Palace people are gathering, discussing the miracle and forming a procession.

Forearm Study
Forearm Study by

Forearm Study

The drawing is a study for the figure of St Sebastian on the Isenheim Altarpiece.

Fourteen Saints Altarpiece (detail)
Fourteen Saints Altarpiece (detail) by

Fourteen Saints Altarpiece (detail)

The picture shows the left wing of an altarpiece from Bindlach. The represented saints are Sts George (in the foreground), Margaret, Catherine, Barbara, Christopher, Pantaleon and Eustach.

Fourteen Saints Altarpiece (detail)
Fourteen Saints Altarpiece (detail) by

Fourteen Saints Altarpiece (detail)

The picture shows the right wing of an altarpiece from Bindlach. The represented saints are Sts Denis (in the foreground), Egidius, Cyriac, Achatius, Erasm, and Vitus.

Fourteen Saints Altarpiece (detail)
Fourteen Saints Altarpiece (detail) by

Fourteen Saints Altarpiece (detail)

The picture shows the back side of an altarpiece from Bindlach. The panel represents The Man of Sorrow.

Head of a Shouting Man
Head of a Shouting Man by

Head of a Shouting Man

Head of a Shouting Man
Head of a Shouting Man by

Head of a Shouting Man

Head of a Young Woman
Head of a Young Woman by

Head of a Young Woman

Head of an Old Man
Head of an Old Man by

Head of an Old Man

Isenheim Altarpiece (first view)
Isenheim Altarpiece (first view) by

Isenheim Altarpiece (first view)

This is the first view of the altarpiece with the wings closed. It is a Crucifixion showing a harrowingly detailed, twisted, and bloody figure of Christ on the cross in the centre flanked, on the left, by the mourning Madonna being comforted by John the Apostle, and Mary Magdalene kneeling with hands clasped in prayer, and, on the right, by a standing John the Baptist pointing to the dying Saviour. At the feet of the Baptist is a lamb holding a cross, symbol of the “Lamb of God” slaughtered for man’s sins. The predella represents The Lamentation.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 22 minutes):

Heinrich Sch�tz: Die sieben Worte am Kreuz SWV 478

Isenheim Altarpiece (second view)
Isenheim Altarpiece (second view) by

Isenheim Altarpiece (second view)

This is the second view of the altarpiece. When the wings are opened, three scenes of celebration are revealed: the Annunciation, the Angel Concert for Madonna and Child, and the Resurrection.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 6 minutes):

Guillaume Dufay: Ave, maris stella, hymn for the feasts of the Blessed Virgin Mary

Isenheim Altarpiece (third view)
Isenheim Altarpiece (third view) by

Isenheim Altarpiece (third view)

The third view with wings opened again discloses on either side of the carved innermost shrine two panels, Sts Paul and Anthony in the Desert and a Temptation of St Anthony.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 9 minutes):

Josquin Desprez: In principio erat verbum, motet

Kneeling King with Two Angels
Kneeling King with Two Angels by

Kneeling King with Two Angels

Lamentation of Christ
Lamentation of Christ by

Lamentation of Christ

Lamentation of Christ (detail)
Lamentation of Christ (detail) by

Lamentation of Christ (detail)

Lamentation of Christ (detail)
Lamentation of Christ (detail) by

Lamentation of Christ (detail)

Man Looking Up
Man Looking Up by

Man Looking Up

This drawing is a study for St John on the Crucifixion in Karlsruhe.

Mary with the Child and Young St John
Mary with the Child and Young St John by

Mary with the Child and Young St John

Mary with the Sun below her Feet
Mary with the Sun below her Feet by

Mary with the Sun below her Feet

Meeting of St Erasm and St Maurice
Meeting of St Erasm and St Maurice by

Meeting of St Erasm and St Maurice

Gr�newald worked in the court of the Bishop of Mainz, and he painted this panel to the Bishop’s Fond in Halle. Albert, the Bishop of Brandenburg is pictured as St Erasm on the painting.

Meeting of St Erasm and St Maurice (detail)
Meeting of St Erasm and St Maurice (detail) by

Meeting of St Erasm and St Maurice (detail)

The detail represents St Erasm.

Meeting of St Erasm and St Maurice (detail)
Meeting of St Erasm and St Maurice (detail) by

Meeting of St Erasm and St Maurice (detail)

The detail represents St Maurice.

Moses (?)
Moses (?) by
Nativity (detail)
Nativity (detail) by

Nativity (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, second view: detail of the central panel.

Nativity (detail)
Nativity (detail) by

Nativity (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, second view: detail of the central panel.

Nativity (detail)
Nativity (detail) by

Nativity (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, second view: detail of the central panel.

Nativity (detail)
Nativity (detail) by

Nativity (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, second view: detail of the central panel.

Nativity (detail)
Nativity (detail) by

Nativity (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, second view: detail of the central panel (God in the Heaven).

Nativity (detail)
Nativity (detail) by

Nativity (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, second view: detail of the central panel.

Nativity (detail)
Nativity (detail) by

Nativity (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, second view: detail of the central panel.

Portrait of Guido Guersi
Portrait of Guido Guersi by

Portrait of Guido Guersi

Guido Guersi was the Preceptor of the monastery at Isenheim who commissioned the Isenheim Altarpiece.

Praying Woman
Praying Woman by

Praying Woman

This drawing is a study for the Isenheim Altarpiece.

Self-Portrait
Self-Portrait by

Self-Portrait

This important drawing was overdrawn (pen and indian ink) by an unknown hand in the 17th century. The dating (1529) is also a later addition.

Smiling Woman
Smiling Woman by
St Anthony (detail)
St Anthony (detail) by

St Anthony (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, first view: detail of the right side panel.

St Anthony (detail)
St Anthony (detail) by

St Anthony (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, first view: detail of the right side panel.

St Anthony (detail)
St Anthony (detail) by

St Anthony (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, first view: detail of the right side panel.

St Anthony (detail)
St Anthony (detail) by

St Anthony (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, third view: detail of the left side panel.

St Antony the Hermit
St Antony the Hermit by

St Antony the Hermit

The picture shows the right side panel of the first view of the Isenheim Altarpiece.

St Catherine
St Catherine by

St Catherine

The drawing is probably a study for a lost altarpiece in Mainz.

St Dorothy with the Basket of Flowers
St Dorothy with the Basket of Flowers by

St Dorothy with the Basket of Flowers

The preparatory drawing was made probably for an altarpiece, now lost, in Mainz.

St Dorothy, Virgin and Martyr, died c. 300-310. She was sent to her death by Fabritius, governor of Caesarea in Cappadocia, for refusing to marry or worship idols. On her way to martyrdom, a young lawyer named Theophilus asked her jestingly to bring him some apples and roses from the Garden of Paradise. Dorothy (whose name means “gift of God”) promised to do so. An angel then appeared with a basket containing three roes and three apples. Theophilus was immediately converted and he too died a martyr. Dorothy’s cult started around the fifteenth century and is prevalent above all in Germany and Italy. She is the patron saint of florists.

St Elizabeth and a Saint Woman with Palm
St Elizabeth and a Saint Woman with Palm by

St Elizabeth and a Saint Woman with Palm

The two grisailles form the lower panels of the fixed wings of the Heller Altarpiece.

St John in the Forest
St John in the Forest by

St John in the Forest

St Lawrence and St Cyricus
St Lawrence and St Cyricus by

St Lawrence and St Cyricus

The two grisailles form the upper panels of the fixed wings of the Heller Altarpiece.

St Paul (detail)
St Paul (detail) by

St Paul (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, third view: detail of the left side panel.

St Sebastian
St Sebastian by

St Sebastian

The picture shows the left side panel of the first view of the Isenheim Altarpiece.

St Sebastian (detail)
St Sebastian (detail) by

St Sebastian (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, first view: detail of the left side panel.

St Sebastian (detail)
St Sebastian (detail) by

St Sebastian (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, first view: detail of the left side panel.

St Sebastian (detail)
St Sebastian (detail) by

St Sebastian (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, first view: detail of the left side panel.

Sts Paul and Anthony in the Desert
Sts Paul and Anthony in the Desert by

Sts Paul and Anthony in the Desert

The picture shows the left wing of the third view of the Isenheim Altarpiece.

Sts Paul and Anthony in the Desert (detail)
Sts Paul and Anthony in the Desert (detail) by

Sts Paul and Anthony in the Desert (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, third view: detail of the left side panel.

Sts Paul and Anthony in the Desert (detail)
Sts Paul and Anthony in the Desert (detail) by

Sts Paul and Anthony in the Desert (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, third view: detail of the left side panel.

Sts Paul and Anthony in the Desert (detail)
Sts Paul and Anthony in the Desert (detail) by

Sts Paul and Anthony in the Desert (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, third view: detail of the left side panel.

Study of an Apostle
Study of an Apostle by

Study of an Apostle

Study of an Apostle
Study of an Apostle by

Study of an Apostle

Stuppach Madonna
Stuppach Madonna by

Stuppach Madonna

The painting was the central panel of the Altarpiece of Our Lady of the Snow in the Abbey Church at Aschaffenburg, near Bad Mergentheim.

While Gr�newald’s late Passion pictures become more iconic and staged in a darker and more barren world than before, his later treatment of the Infancy is lyrical with the Madonna and Child placed in a lush and refreshing garden landscape.

Stuppach Madonna (detail)
Stuppach Madonna (detail) by

Stuppach Madonna (detail)

Stuppach Madonna (detail)
Stuppach Madonna (detail) by

Stuppach Madonna (detail)

The detail shows the flowers in a bottle at the lower right corner of the painting.

The Annunciation
The Annunciation by

The Annunciation

The picture shows the left wing of the second view of the Isenheim Altarpiece.

The Annunciation (detail)
The Annunciation (detail) by

The Annunciation (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, second view: detail of the left side panel (Mary annunciated).

The Annunciation (detail)
The Annunciation (detail) by

The Annunciation (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, second view: detail of the left side panel (the angel announcing).

The Annunciation (detail)
The Annunciation (detail) by

The Annunciation (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, second view: detail of the left side panel (Prophet Isaiah).

The Crucifixion
The Crucifixion by

The Crucifixion

The Crucifixion
The Crucifixion by

The Crucifixion

The panel is referred to as the Small Crucifixion.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 3 minutes):

Guillaume Dufay: Hymn for Easter

The Crucifixion
The Crucifixion by

The Crucifixion

The picture shows the central panel of the first view of the Isenheim Altarpiece.

Art for Gr�newald did not consist in the search for the hidden laws of beauty - for him it could have only one aim, the aim of all religious art in the Middle Ages - that of providing a sermon in pictures, of proclaiming the sacred truths as taught by the Church. The central panel of the Isenheim altarpiece shows that he sacrificed all other considerations to this one overriding aim. Of beauty, as the Italian artists saw it, there is none in the stark and cruel picture of the crucified Saviour. Like a preacher at Passiontide, Gr�newald left nothing undone to bring home to us the horrors of this scene of suffering: Christ’s dying body is distorted by the torture of the cross; the thorns of the scourges stick in the festering wounds which cover the whole figure. The dark red blood forms a glaring contrast to the sickly green of the flesh. By His features and the impressive gesture of His hands, the Man of Sorrows speaks to us of the meaning of His Calvary.

His suffering is reflected in the traditional group of Mary, in the garb of a widow, fainting in the arms of St John the Evangelist, to whose care the Lord has commended her, and in the smaller figure of St Mary Magdalene with her vessel of ointments, wringing her hands in sorrow. On the other side of the Cross, there stands the powerful figure of St John the Baptist with the ancient symbol of the lamb carrying the cross and pouring out its blood into the chalice of the Holy Communion. With a stern and commanding gesture he points towards the Saviour, and over him are written the words that he speaks (according to the gospel of St John iii. 30): ‘He must increase, but I must decrease.’

There is little doubt that the artist wanted the beholder of the altar to meditate on these words, which he emphasized so strongly by the pointing hand of St John the Baptist. Perhaps he even wanted us to see how Christ must grow and we diminish. For in this picture, in which reality seems to be depicted in all its unmitigated horror, there is one unreal and fantastic trait: the figures differ greatly in size. We need only compare the hands of St Mary Magdalene under the Cross with those of Christ to become fully aware of the astonishing difference in their dimensions. It is clear that in these matters Gr�newald rejected the rules of modern art as it had developed since the Renaissance, and that he deliberately returned to the principles of medieval and primitive painters, who varied the size of their figures according to their importance in the picture. Just as he had sacrificed the pleasing kind of beauty for the sake of the spiritual lesson of the altar, he also disregarded the new demand for correct proportions, since this helped him to express the mystic truth of the words of St John.

The Crucifixion
The Crucifixion by

The Crucifixion

This is one of the panels of the two-part altarpiece originally in the church at Tauberbischofsheim. The Carrying the Cross was seen from the direction of the choir while the other part, the Crucifixion, from the nave.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 3 minutes):

Guillaume Dufay: Hymn for Easter

The Crucifixion (detail)
The Crucifixion (detail) by

The Crucifixion (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, first view: detail of the central panel (Mary and St John the Evangelist).

The Crucifixion (detail)
The Crucifixion (detail) by

The Crucifixion (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, first view: detail of the central panel (Mary Magdalene).

The Crucifixion (detail)
The Crucifixion (detail) by

The Crucifixion (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, first view: detail of the central panel (St John the Baptist with the lamb).

The Crucifixion (detail)
The Crucifixion (detail) by

The Crucifixion (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, first view: detail of the central panel (the arm of Christ).

The Crucifixion (detail)
The Crucifixion (detail) by

The Crucifixion (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, first view: detail of the central panel (the feet of Christ).

The Crucifixion (detail)
The Crucifixion (detail) by

The Crucifixion (detail)

The Isenheim Altarpiece
The Isenheim Altarpiece by

The Isenheim Altarpiece

The picture shows the altarpiece in the chapel of the Mus�e d’Unterlinden in Colmar.

The Lamentation
The Lamentation by

The Lamentation

The picture shows the predella of the Isenheim Altarpiece.

The expressivity of its figures have made Gr�newald’s Isenheim Altarpiece one of the most famous works of early German painting. Until his death in 1524, Holbein’s father worked in the same Antonite monastery that had commissioned Gr�newald’s altarpiece. Holbein the Younger will also have known the work in the original, as Isenheim is not far from Basel and so is easy to reach from there.

The Lamentation (detail)
The Lamentation (detail) by

The Lamentation (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, detail of the predella (Mary Magdalene).

The Lamentation (detail)
The Lamentation (detail) by

The Lamentation (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, detail of the predella (Mary).

The Mocking of Christ
The Mocking of Christ by

The Mocking of Christ

Gr�newald’s earliest datable work is the Mocking of Christ, a colourful, vehemently expressive painting demonstrating his ability to create dazzling light effects. The painting depicts Christ blindfolded and being beaten by a band of grotesque men. The figures are thick-bodied, soft, and fleshy, done in a manner suggestive of the Italian High Renaissance. Elements of the work also show Gr�newald’s assimilation of D�rer, specifically his Apocalypse series. Different from High Renaissance idealism and humanism, however, are Gr�newald’s uses of figural distortion to portray violence and tragedy, thin fluttering drapery, highly contrasting areas of light and shadow, and unusually stark and iridescent colour. It is these elements, already in evidence in this early work, that Gr�newald was to develop into the masterful, individualistic style most fully realized in his Isenheim Altarpiece.

The Mocking of Christ (detail)
The Mocking of Christ (detail) by

The Mocking of Christ (detail)

The Mocking of Christ (detail)
The Mocking of Christ (detail) by

The Mocking of Christ (detail)

The Mocking of Christ (detail)
The Mocking of Christ (detail) by

The Mocking of Christ (detail)

The Resurrection
The Resurrection by

The Resurrection

The picture shows the right wing of the second view of the Isenheim Altarpiece.

The Resurrection (detail)
The Resurrection (detail) by

The Resurrection (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, second view: detail of the right side panel.

The Resurrection (detail)
The Resurrection (detail) by

The Resurrection (detail)

Isenheim Altarpiece, second view: detail of the right side panel.

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