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Hieronymus Bosch

Part of the World of Art series
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No one can look at the paintings of Hieronymus Bosch without amazement and bewilderment.

Professor Gibson shows that what seems inexplicable to us today--the canvases full of torture, monsters, and leering devils--was perfectly intelligible to the fifteenth-century viewer.

The subjects of Bosch's paintings were in fact the overwhelming concerns of late medieval Europe: the Last Judgment, original sin, death, temptations of the flesh.

The author describes each picture in detail, placing each work within the context of medieval folklore and religion, and explains that many of the acts portrayed in the pictures were visual translations of verbal puns or metaphors.

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Product Details
Thames & Hudson Ltd
050020134X / 9780500201343
Paperback / softback
23/07/1973
United Kingdom
180 pages, 125 Illustrations, black and white; 26 Illustrations, color
149 x 210 mm
General (US: Trade) Learn More