Akademik

Memlinc, Hans
(c. 1440-1494)
   Hans Memlinc was Rogier van der Weyden's most faithful follower. A native of the town of Seligenstadt on the Main, Germany, he moved to Bruges, Flanders, sometime around 1465. By the following year, he was a member of the Bruges Guild of Painters and, by 1480, he was among the city's wealthiest citizens who were required to pay an added tax to support the war against France. Though stylistically his art emulates that of van der Weyden, Memlinc lacks the passion and drama of the older master. Instead, his works are serene and graceful, with an emphasis on order and balance. Among his early works, the Donne Triptych (1468-1469; London, National Gallery) stands out. Created for Sir John Donne of Kidwelly, a Welshman who lived in Calais and who was probably in Bruges for the celebration of Charles the Bold's marriage to Margaret of York, the work shows the enthroned Virgin and Child flanked by angels and Sts. Catherine and Barbara, with the donor, his wife, and children kneeling at their feet. On the wings are Sts. John the Evangelist and John the Baptist, Donne's namesaints. The slender, delicate figures pose emotionless in a tight composition that connects the three panels through the extension of the central space into the altarpiece's side wings. Memlinc'sMartyrdom of St. Sebastian (c. 1470; Brussels, Musées Royaux des Beaux-Arts), rendered soon after the Donne Triptych, afforded the opportunity to experiment with the human nude form. The saint is presented as a slender, youthful figure who remains calm in the face of adversity. His delicate, graceful features provide a marked contrast to the brutish Roman archers who prepare their bows to effect the saint's martyrdom. Memlinc's Passion Panel (c. 1470; Turin, Galleria Sabauda) also belongs to this period, the patron Tommaso Portinari, the Medici bank's representative in Bruges who also patronized Hugo van der Goes and who appears in the work in the foreground along with his wife. Here Memlinc cleverly resolved the problem of unifying multiple scenes on one pictorial surface by inserting them into the various buildings he enclosed within the walls of Jerusalem. Memlinc would again include multiple scenes in the Life of the Virgin and Christ Panel (1480; Munich, Alte Pinakothek), utilizing architecture and mountainous forms to organize and separate each event from the rest. Painted for Pieter Bultinc, a member of the tanners' guild, this work, and the one for Portinari, anticipate the landscapes by Joachim Patinir.
   For Angelo di Jacopo Tani, another representative of the Medici bank in Bruges, Memlinc created the Last Judgment Triptych (1473; Danzig, Muzeum Pomorskie), a work seized by pirates on its way to Florence and placed in the Church of St. Mary in Danzig. In its closed state, the altarpiece shows Jacopo and his wife Caterina kneeling in front of grisaille figures of the Virgin, Child, and St. Michael. When opened, the viewer is surprised by the unexpected burst of color and action, particularly given the serenity and pale colors of the exterior. In the interior's center is Christ as judge, below him St. Michael weighing the souls, and at the sides the blessed entering heaven and the damned cast into hell. Here again, Memlinc worked with the nude form, now in action. Memlinc once again tackled the nude in his Bathsheba (1484; Stuttgart, Staatsgalerie), an episode from the biblical story of David. She, a soft, delicate woman of the Northern type (small breasts, rounded belly) steps out of her bath, her servant wrapping her in a towel that does little to cover her nudity. In the left background is the roof from which David saw Bathsheba in the nude. The reliefs on the church portals, also in the background, relate the death of Bathsheba's husband, Uriah, sent to battle by David so he could rid himself of his contender.
   Other works by Memlinc that deserve mention are the Chasse of St. Ursula (1489; Bruges, Hospital of St. John), a reliquary casket constructed to look like a miniature Gothic church and decorated with scenes from Ursula's life based on Jacobus da Voragine's Golden Legend, as well as his portrait Man with a Medal (c. 1475-1480; Antwerp, Musée Royal des Beaux-Arts), one of the many portraits by Memlinc to have survived. His sitter in this example is shown in bust length, set against a landscape, and holding a coin with Emperor Nero's profile. His identification as either Niccoló Spinelli or Giovanni di Candida, two Italian medalists, have been proposed, though neither is certain.
   Memlinc held his position as the most important master of Bruges until his death in 1494, when he was succeeded by Gerard David. His influence carried through other regions. Italians, among them Pietro Perugino, were exposed to his art via the merchants who worked in Bruges and then shipped his paintings to their native cities. Memlinc's Last Judgment, which ended up in Danzig, was emulated by local masters. Finally, contacts between Spain and Flanders brought Memlinc's delicate, graceful style to the attention of Bartolomé Bermejo and other Hispano-Flemish masters.

Historical dictionary of Renaissance art. . 2008.