About This Book
The essay links the nation's turbulent history to its visual culture, arguing that Flemish art combines wit and convivial genre scenes with harsher strains of cruelty, melancholy, sensual mysticism, and spirited life-affirmation. It surveys tendencies from homegrown realism and peasant subjects to phantastic and symbolic visions, examines historical prints and genre painters, and interprets artworks as repositories of collective memory forged by warfare and political fragmentation. Through close readings and illustrated examples the text seeks to deepen readers' understanding of how popular character and artistic expression shape and respond to one another, showing art as both testimony and transformation of traumatic pasts.
About the Author
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