In this delightfully engaging book, Walter S. Gibson takes a new look at Bruegel, arguing that the artist was no erudite philosopher, but a man very much in the world, and that a significant part of his art is best appreciated in the context of humour
Walter S. Gibson Libros
Walter Samuel Gibson fue un historiador del arte especializado en el Renacimiento del Norte, con un enfoque particular en la obra de Hieronymus Bosch. Su erudición profundiza en los intrincados detalles y el contexto histórico de estas significativas creaciones artísticas. El enfoque de Gibson buscó iluminar el complejo mundo y la visión única de sus temas elegidos. Sus contribuciones ofrecen valiosas perspectivas sobre una era crucial de la historia del arte.



Hieronymus Bosch
- 180 páginas
- 7 horas de lectura
"An exceptional book, sensible, illuminating and readable...probably the best straightforward account of Bosch and his works which we shall have for some time."—Times Literary Supplement
Bruegel
- 216 páginas
- 8 horas de lectura
Although Pieter Bruegel's pictures have been celebrated throughout the past four hundred years, the artist himself remains a shadowy and misunderstood figure. In a volume which will widen the understanding and enhance the enjoyment of Bruegel's many admirers, Walter Gibson illuminates the sixteenth-century world in which the artist lived. He analyzes the different strands of Bruegel's inspiration, examines his works, and considers his influence on later artists. Dispelling the notion of Bruegel the simpleton peasant, the author shows us Bruegel the cultivated artist, satisfying an urban society's pleasure in moralizing tales and proverbs, rooted in the rich, bourgeois, brilliant Antwerp of the Flemish Renaissance.