Master of the Plump-Cheeked Madonnas

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Virgin and Child with Saints Dominic, Augustine, Margaret and Barbara Master of the Plump-Cheeked Madonnas - Virgin and Child with Saints Dominic, Augustine, Margaret and Barbara.jpeg
Virgin and Child with Saints Dominic, Augustine, Margaret and Barbara

The Master of the Plump-Cheeked Madonnas (fl. between 1500 and 1525) is the notname given to a Flemish painter who likely worked in Bruges in the first quarter of the 16th century. He produced devotional pictures in a style reminiscent of contemporary painters working in Bruges such as Gerard David and Ambrosius Benson. [1]

Contents

Identification of the oeuvre

Holy Family with Saints Catherine and Barbara Master of the Plump-Cheeked Madonnas - The Holy Family with Saints Catherine and Barbara.jpg
Holy Family with Saints Catherine and Barbara

In an article published in 2000, the Belgian art historian Didier Martens grouped eight paintings together under the notname Master of the Plump-Cheeked Madonnas. The key work around which he built the identification was the Virgin and Child with Saints Dominic, Augustine, Margaret and Barbara (at that time in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum and since auctioned by Christie's on 29 January 2014, New York, lot 105). On stylistic grounds Didier Martens attributed the works to an anonymous painter believed to have been active in Bruges during the first half of the 16th century. All of the works contain female figures which are characterised by their rounded, full faces. It is this key feature that gave rise to the naming of the artist as the 'Master of the Plump-Cheeked Madonnas'. [1] In particular, the faces of the female figures in these works show a strong resemblance to each other: the forehead is high and clear, the eyes are half-closed, the eyelids are fat, the eyebrows are fine and curved, the nose ends on a straight edge and the nostrils are narrow. [2] Stylistically the paintings are close to the mature work of other Bruges painters such as Gerard David and Ambrosius Benson.

Whereas the artist was likely active in Bruges as is evidenced by the clear influence of the Bruges style on his work it does not necessarily mean that he was a native of Bruges. [1]

Works

About a dozen works are now attributed to the Master. [3] The subject matter of the works attributed to the Master are devotional in nature and most of them depict scenes with the Virgin and Child, the Holy family and the so-called sacra conversazione, i.e. the Virgin and Child amidst a group of saints in a relatively informal grouping. A few portraits by his hand have also been preserved. These works likely portrayed the donors who had paid for the devotional work of which the portraits had formed the pendants. [1]

Madonna and Child with a Member of the Hillensberger Family Master of the Plump-Cheeked Madonnas - Madonna and Child with a Member of the Hillensberger Family.JPG
Madonna and Child with a Member of the Hillensberger Family

Selected works

The works attributed to the Master of the Plump-Cheeked Madonnas include:

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 D. Martens, 'Le Maître aux Madones Joufflues: Essai de monographie sur un anonyme brugeois du XVIme siècle,' Wallraf-Richartz-Jahrbuch LXI, 2000, pp. 112-115, 141, n. 23, figs. 1, 6, 15 (in French)
  2. D. Martens, 'Une oeuvre méconnue du Maître aux madones joufflues', Cahiers du Musée des beaux-Arts de Lyons (2002-2006), kol. 28-35 (in French)
  3. D. Martens, 'Deux nouvelles attributions au Maître des madones joufflues', Oud Holland 115 (2001-2002), p. 157-166 (in French)

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