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{{Short description|Flemish painter}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2020}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2020}}
[[File:Joos van Cleve - Self-Portrait - WGA5048.jpg|thumb|280px|Self-Portrait]]
[[File:Joos van Cleve - Self-Portrait - WGA5048.jpg|thumb|280px|Self-Portrait]]


'''Joos van Cleve''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|k|l|eɪ|v|ə}};<ref>[http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/cleve "Cleve"]. ''[[Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary]]''.</ref> also '''Joos van der Beke'''; c. 1485-1490 &ndash; 1540/1541) was a leading painter active in [[Antwerp]] from his arrival there around 1511 to his death in 1540 or 1541. Within [[Dutch and Flemish Renaissance painting]], he combines the traditional techniques of [[Early Netherlandish painting]] with influences of more contemporary Renaissance painting styles.<ref name=three>{{cite web|title=Rijksmuseum: Joos van Cleve|url=http://www.rijksmuseum.nl/aria/aria_artists/00017184?lang=en|access-date=20 April 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120203014228/http://www.rijksmuseum.nl/aria/aria_artists/00017184?lang=en|archive-date=3 February 2012|url-status=dead}}</ref>
'''Joos van Cleve''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|k|l|eɪ|v|ə}};<ref>[http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/cleve "Cleve"]. ''[[Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary]]''.</ref> also '''Joos van der Beke'''; c. 1485–1490 1540/1541) was a leading painter active in [[Antwerp]] from his arrival there around 1511 until his death in 1540 or 1541. Within [[Dutch and Flemish Renaissance painting]], he combines the traditional techniques of [[Early Netherlandish painting]] with influences of more contemporary Renaissance painting styles.<ref name=three>{{cite web|title=Rijksmuseum: Joos van Cleve|url=http://www.rijksmuseum.nl/aria/aria_artists/00017184?lang=en|access-date=20 April 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120203014228/http://www.rijksmuseum.nl/aria/aria_artists/00017184?lang=en|archive-date=3 February 2012|url-status=dead}}</ref>
[[File:Joos van cleve inv.2928.jpg|thumb|''[[Rest on the Flight into Egypt]]'']]


An active member and co-deacon of the [[Guild of Saint Luke]] of Antwerp, he is known mostly for his religious works and portraits, some of royalty. He ran a large workshop, with at least five pupils and other assistants, which produced paintings in a variety of styles over his career.<ref>Leeflang, 62-63, 71</ref> As a skilled technician, his art shows sensitivity to color and a unique solidarity of figures.<ref name=one>{{cite book|last=Hand|first=John Oliver|title=Joos Van Cleve: The Complete Paintings|year=2005|publisher=Yale University Press|isbn=0-300-10578-9|pages=1}}</ref> His style is highly eclectic: he was one of the first to introduce broad [[world landscape]]s in the backgrounds of his paintings, sometimes collaborating with [[Joachim Patinir]], which would become a popular technique of sixteenth century [[northern Renaissance]] paintings. Some works reflect the popular style of [[Antwerp Mannerism]], while others are variations on early Netherlandish masters of two or more generations before, or reflect recent Italian painting.<ref>Snyder, 412-418</ref>
An active member and co-deacon of the [[Guild of Saint Luke]] of Antwerp, he is known mostly for his religious works and portraits, some of royalty. He ran a large workshop, with at least five pupils and other assistants, which produced paintings in a variety of styles over his career.<ref>Leeflang, 62–63, 71</ref> As a skilled technician, his art shows sensitivity to color and a unique solidarity of figures.<ref name=one>{{cite book|last=Hand|first=John Oliver|title=Joos Van Cleve: The Complete Paintings|year=2005|publisher=Yale University Press|isbn=0-300-10578-9|pages=1}}</ref> His style is highly eclectic: he was one of the first to introduce broad [[world landscape]]s in the backgrounds of his paintings, sometimes collaborating with [[Joachim Patinir]], which would become a popular technique of sixteenth century [[northern Renaissance]] paintings. Some works reflect the popular style of [[Antwerp Mannerism]], while others are variations on early Netherlandish masters of two or more generations before, or reflect recent Italian painting.<ref>Snyder, 412–418</ref>


Four of his more important paintings have the [[monogram]] "JB", presumably for Joos van der Beke, rather inconspicuously placed. In three other works a self-portrait is placed among the minor figures.<ref>Leeflang, 61-63, 71</ref> From the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries, the name of Joos van Cleve as an artist was lost. Some of the paintings now attributed to Joos van Cleve were, at that time, known as the works of the [[Master of the Death of the Virgin]]", after the triptych in the [[Wallraf-Richartz-Museum]] in [[Cologne]]. In 1894 it was discovered that the monogram on the back of the triptych was that of Joos van der Beke, the real name of Joos van Cleve.<ref name="two"/> His oeuvre was reconstructed in the 1920s and 1930s by [[Ludwig von Baldass]] and [[Max Jakob Friedländer]].<ref>Hand, 4</ref> Now over 300 works are generally attributed to him or his workshop, which vary considerably in both quality and style.<ref>Leeflang, 63</ref>
Four of his more important paintings have the [[monogram]] "JB", presumably for Joos van der Beke, rather inconspicuously placed. In three other works a self-portrait is placed among the minor figures.<ref>Leeflang, 61–63, 71</ref> From the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries, the name of Joos van Cleve as an artist was lost. Some of the paintings now attributed to Joos van Cleve were, at that time, known as the works of the "Master of the Death of the Virgin", after the triptych in the [[Wallraf-Richartz-Museum]] in [[Cologne]]. In 1894 it was discovered that the monogram on the back of the triptych was that of Joos van der Beke, the real name of Joos van Cleve.<ref name="two"/> His oeuvre was reconstructed in the 1920s and 1930s by [[Ludwig von Baldass]] and [[Max Jakob Friedländer]].<ref>Hand, 4</ref> Now over 300 works are generally attributed to him or his workshop, which vary considerably in both quality and style.<ref name="auto">Leeflang, 63</ref>


He was the father of [[Cornelis van Cleve]] (1520-1567) who also became a painter, and inherited the workshop.<ref>Leeflang, 63</ref> Cornelis became mentally ill during a residence in England and was therefore referred to as 'Sotte Cleef' (mad Cleef).<ref name=two>{{cite book|last=Campbell|first=Lorne|title=The fifteenth century Netherlandish paintings : National Gallery catalogues|year=2000|publisher=Yale Univ. Press|location=New Haven|isbn=0-300-07701-7|edition=Repr.}}</ref><ref name=rkd>[http://explore.rkd.nl/explore/artists/17248 Joos van Cleve] at the [[Netherlands Institute for Art History]] {{in lang|nl}}</ref>
He was the father of [[Cornelis van Cleve]] (1520–1567) who also became a painter, and inherited the workshop.<ref name="auto"/> Cornelis became mentally ill during a residence in England and was therefore referred to as 'Sotte Cleef' (mad Cleef).<ref name=two>{{cite book|last=Campbell|first=Lorne|title=The fifteenth century Netherlandish paintings : National Gallery catalogues|year=2000|publisher=Yale Univ. Press|location=New Haven|isbn=0-300-07701-7|edition=Repr.}}</ref><ref name=rkd>[http://explore.rkd.nl/explore/artists/17248 Joos van Cleve] at the [[Netherlands Institute for Art History]] {{in lang|nl}}</ref>


== Life==
==Life==
[[File:Joos van Cleve - Altarpiece of the Lamentation - WGA5041.jpg|thumb|240px|Altarpiece of the Lamentation, 1520-1525]]
[[File:Joos van Cleve - Altarpiece of the Lamentation - WGA5041.jpg|thumb|240px|Altarpiece of the Lamentation, 1520–1525]]


Joos van Cleve was born around 1485-90. The birthplace of Joos van Cleve is not precisely known. In various Antwerp legal documents he is referred to as 'Joos van der Beke alias van Cleve'. It is therefore likely that he came from the [[Lower Rhine|Lower Rhenish region]] or city named [[Kleve]] (in traditional English "Cleves"), from which his name is derived. It is assumed that he began his artistic training around 1505 in the workshop of [[Jan Joest]], whom he assisted in the panel paintings of the wings for the high altar of the Nikolaikirche in [[Kalkar]], Lower Rhine, Germany,<ref name=ox>John Oliver Hand. "Cleve, van (i)." Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press. Web. 25 March 2015</ref> from 1506 to 1509. These include one of his self-portraits. From this a birth date of about 1485 to 1490 is inferred.<ref>Leeflang, 62-63; Hand, 3</ref>
Joos van Cleve was born around 1485–90. The birthplace of Joos van Cleve is not precisely known. In various Antwerp legal documents he is referred to as 'Joos van der Beke alias van Cleve'. It is therefore likely that he came from the [[Lower Rhine|Lower Rhenish region]] or city named [[Kleve]] (in traditional English "Cleves"), from which his name is derived. It is assumed that he began his artistic training around 1505 in the workshop of [[Jan Joest]], whom he assisted in the panel paintings of the wings for the high altar of the Nikolaikirche in [[Kalkar]], Lower Rhine, Germany,<ref name=ox>John Oliver Hand. "Cleve, van (i)." Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press. Web. 25 March 2015</ref> from 1506 to 1509. These include one of his self-portraits. From this a birth date of about 1485 to 1490 is inferred.<ref>Leeflang, 62–63; Hand, 3</ref>


Joos van Cleve is believed to have moved to [[Bruges]] between 1507 and 1511 since his painting style is similar to that of the painters of Bruges.<ref name=rkd/> Later he moved to Antwerp, and in 1511 became a free master in the Antwerp [[Guild of Saint Luke]]. He was co-deacon of the guild for several years around 1520, along with registering pupils there at various dates between 1516 and 1536.<ref name="two"/> In 1528 he bought a house from his wife's parents. As there are no records of his being in Antwerp between 1529 and 1534, it is possible he spent some of this time in Italy or France at the court, or even London.<ref>Hand, 3</ref><ref name=rkd/>
Joos van Cleve is believed to have moved to [[Bruges]] between 1507 and 1511 since his painting style is similar to that of the painters of Bruges.<ref name=rkd/> Later he moved to Antwerp, and in 1511 became a free master in the Antwerp [[Guild of Saint Luke]]. He was co-deacon of the guild for several years around 1520, along with registering pupils there at various dates between 1516 and 1536.<ref name="two"/> In 1528 he bought a house from his wife's parents. As there are no records of his being in Antwerp between 1529 and 1534, it is possible he spent some of this time in Italy or France at the court, or even London.<ref>Hand, 3</ref><ref name=rkd/>


From surviving documents it is clear that he was alive in Antwerp on 10 November 1540 and dead by 4 February 1541.<ref>Leeflang, 62-63</ref>
From surviving documents it is clear that he was alive in Antwerp on 10 November 1540 and dead by 4 February 1541.<ref>Leeflang, 62–63</ref>


=== Personal life ===
=== Personal life ===
He had two children from his first marriage, a daughter and a son. His son Cornelis (1520) became a painter. Although the date of his death is unknown, Joos van Cleve drew up a will and testament on 10 November 1540, and his second wife was listed as a widow in April 1541.<ref name="two"/>
He had two children from his first marriage, a daughter and a son. His son named Cornelis (1520) became a painter. Although the date of his death is unknown, Joos van Cleve drew up a will and testament on 10 November 1540, and his second wife was listed as a widow in April 1541.<ref name="two"/>


There are a number of other "van Cleef" Antwerp painters recorded from his time, some of whom may have been relatives.
There are a number of other "van Cleef" Antwerp painters recorded from his time, some of whom may have been relatives.
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==Work==
==Work==
[[File:Joos van cleve, adorazione dei magi, 1515 ca. 01.JPG|thumb| ''Adoration of the Magi'' triptych, apparently the [[prime version]], [[Museo di Capodimonte]], Naples, c. 1515]]
[[File:Joos van cleve, adorazione dei magi, 1515 ca. 01.JPG|thumb| ''Adoration of the Magi'' triptych, apparently the [[prime version]], [[Museo di Capodimonte]], Naples, c. 1515]]
Compositions were often copied, repeated or adapted; for example at least six versions of an ''Adoration of the Magi'' triptych composition by him and his workshop are known, though varying considerably in size, with the widths of the centre panel ranging from 56 to 93 cm.<ref>Leeflang, 63</ref> This probably reflected different intended sites for the paintings, from private house chapels to churches.<ref>Leeflang, 71</ref>
Compositions were often copied, repeated or adapted; for example at least six versions of an ''Adoration of the Magi'' triptych composition by him and his workshop are known, though varying considerably in size, with the widths of the centre panel ranging from 56 to 93&nbsp;cm.<ref name="auto"/> This probably reflected different intended sites for the paintings, from private house chapels to churches.<ref>Leeflang, 71</ref>


Numerous paintings contain [[heraldry]], which often enables the customers to be identified, including eleven of the twenty-one [[altarpiece]]s attributed to the workshop. In other works the identity of local saints gives clues. Antwerp was the centre of European trade in the period, and the Antwerp merchant class was highly cosmopolitan. Five paintings can be linked with Italy, especially [[Genoa]], and others to [[Cologne]] (three altarpieces) and [[Danzig]] in Germany, and four to various Netherlandish cities. Others have the arms of his homeland Mark-Cleves, the territories of [[John III, Duke of Cleves]], and the [[Holy Roman Empire]], suggesting the duke or a close courtier. Three paintings delivered to King [[Francois I of France]] are recorded.<ref>Leeflang, 69-71</ref>
Numerous paintings contain [[heraldry]], which often enables the customers to be identified, including eleven of the twenty-one [[altarpiece]]s attributed to the workshop. In other works the identity of local saints gives clues. Antwerp was the centre of European trade in the period, and the Antwerp merchant class was highly cosmopolitan. Five paintings can be linked with Italy, especially [[Genoa]], and others to [[Cologne]] (three altarpieces) and [[Danzig]] in Germany, and four to various Netherlandish cities. Others have the arms of his homeland Mark-Cleves, the territories of [[John III, Duke of Cleves]], and the [[Holy Roman Empire]], suggesting the duke or a close courtier. Three paintings delivered to King [[Francois I of France]] are recorded.<ref>Leeflang, 69–71</ref>


The great majority of his work is religious subjects or portraits, with the main exceptions being versions of the ''Suicide of [[Lucretia]]'', and a [[Leonardo da Vinci|Leonardo-esque]] half-length nude, the ''Mona Vanna'' in the [[National Gallery in Prague]].
The great majority of his work is religious subjects or portraits, with the main exceptions being versions of the ''Suicide of [[Lucretia]]'', and a [[Leonardo da Vinci|Leonardo-esque]] half-length nude, the ''Mona Vanna'' in the [[National Gallery in Prague]].

In January 2021 an episode the [[BBC Four]] series ''[[Britain's Lost Masterpieces]]'', centred on the fine art collection of the [[Royal Pavilion]] in Brighton, uncovered a work of Joos van Cleve, a portrayal of [[Balthazar (magus)|Balthazar]], previously attributed to [[Bernard van Orley]]. The painting had once been the left-hand door of a folding altarpiece triptych.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m000rxmx/britains-lost-masterpieces-series-5-1-brighton|title=Britain's Lost Masterpieces – Series 5: 1. Brighton|via=www.bbc.co.uk}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://artuk.org/discover/artworks/balthazar-75329|title=Balthazar &#124; Art UK}}</ref>


<gallery widths="180px" heights="200px">
<gallery widths="180px" heights="200px">
File:Cat373-cons2017.jpg|''Descent from the Cross'', [[Rogier van der Weyden]]'s [[The Descent from the Cross (van der Weyden)|figures (Prado)]], given a landscape background.<ref>Snyder, 418</ref>
File:Cat373-cons2017.jpg|''Descent from the Cross'', [[Rogier van der Weyden]]'s [[The Descent from the Cross (van der Weyden)|figures (Prado)]], given a landscape background.<ref>Snyder, 418</ref>
File:The Last Judgment by Joos van Cleve.jpg|''The [[Last Judgment]]'', oil on panel, 123.8 cm (48.7 in) high
File:The Last Judgment by Joos van Cleve.jpg|''The [[Last Judgment]]'', oil on panel, 123.8&nbsp;cm (48.7&nbsp;in) high
File:Joos van Cleve, c.1516-18, Le Christ en Salvator Mundi, 54 x 40 cm, Louvre.jpg|''[[Salvator Mundi]]'', c.1516-18, [[Louvre]]
File:Joos van Cleve, c.1516-18, Le Christ en Salvator Mundi, 54 x 40 cm, Louvre.jpg|''[[Salvator Mundi]]'', c.1516-18, [[Louvre]]
File:Joos van Cleve - Annunciation (Metropolitan Museum of Art).jpg|''Annunciation''; Italianate figure style, with the Early Netherlandish domestic setting of works such as the [[Mérode Altarpiece]] of [[Robert Campin]], c. 1525
File:Joos van Cleve - Annunciation (Metropolitan Museum of Art).jpg|''Annunciation''; Italianate figure style, with the Early Netherlandish domestic setting of works such as the [[Mérode Altarpiece]] of [[Robert Campin]], c. 1525
File:Joos van cleve inv.2928.jpg|''[[Rest on the Flight into Egypt]]'', [[Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium]]
File:Joos van Cleve 003.jpg|Portrait of [[Eleanor of Spain|Eleonore of Austria]], Queen of France, c. 1530
</gallery>
</gallery>


[[File:Joos van Cleve 003.jpg|thumb|240px|Portrait of [[Eleanor of Spain|Eleonore of Austria]], Queen of France, c. 1530]]
===Artistic influences===
===Artistic influences===
The influence of Kalkar and Bruges are seen in many of Joos van Cleve's early works, such as ''Adam and Eve'' (1507). The ''Death of the Virgin'' (1520) shows the combined influence of several artists. It has the intense emotionality of [[Hugo van der Goes]], and iconographic ideas of [[Jan van Eyck]] and [[Robert Campin]]. A strong influence of Italian art combined with Joos van Cleve's own color and light sensitivity make his works especially unique. The "[[Antwerp Mannerism|Antwerp Mannerist]]" style is identifiable in the ''Adoration of the Magi''. It is thought that the "Antwerp Mannerists" were in turn influenced by Joos van Cleve.
The influence of Kalkar and Bruges are seen in many of Joos van Cleve's early works, such as ''Adam and Eve'' (1507). The ''Death of the Virgin'' (1520) shows the combined influence of several artists. It has the intense emotionality of [[Hugo van der Goes]], and iconographic ideas of [[Jan van Eyck]] and [[Robert Campin]]. A strong influence of Italian art combined with Joos van Cleve's own color and light sensitivity make his works especially unique. The "[[Antwerp Mannerism|Antwerp Mannerist]]" style is identifiable in the ''Adoration of the Magi''. It is thought that the "Antwerp Mannerists" were in turn influenced by Joos van Cleve.
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Small devotional pictures of the [[Virgin Mary]] were the bread and butter work of early 15th century painting workshops, and Joos van Cleve produced many different types of the ''[[Virgin and Child]]'', the ''[[Holy Family]]'' and the ''Virgin and Child with St Anne''. In some instances the [[prime version]] has been lost, but the type can be recovered through the numerous replicas produced by his workshop and copyists. Most of these were no doubt produced with no specific commission, with many distributed by agents and dealers across Europe, for the houses of the wealthy.
Small devotional pictures of the [[Virgin Mary]] were the bread and butter work of early 15th century painting workshops, and Joos van Cleve produced many different types of the ''[[Virgin and Child]]'', the ''[[Holy Family]]'' and the ''Virgin and Child with St Anne''. In some instances the [[prime version]] has been lost, but the type can be recovered through the numerous replicas produced by his workshop and copyists. Most of these were no doubt produced with no specific commission, with many distributed by agents and dealers across Europe, for the houses of the wealthy.


The Holy Family was a newly popular subject in small devotional paintings, reflecting increased theological and devotional interest in the role of [[Saint Joseph]]. One of the earliest examples of the new type is the painting by Joos dated to c. 1512 at the [[New York Metropolitan Museum of Art]]. This essentially reduced the figures from [[Jan van Eyck]]'s ''[[Lucca Madonna]]'' (c. 1435, [[Städel]], Frankfurt) to a close-up with domestic [[still life]] details, and added Saint Joseph over the Virgin's shoulder. The wine and fruits on the foreground are a reference to Christ's incarnation and future sacrifice. They also hint at the emerging genre of still-life painting in Flanders.<ref>[[James Snyder|Snyder, James]]. ''Northern Renaissance Art'', 1985, p. 417, Harry N. Abrams, {{ISBN|0136235964}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.metmuseum.org/Collections/search-the-collections/436793 |title="The Holy Family", New York Metropolitan Museum of Art |publisher=Metmuseum.org |access-date=2019-01-15}}</ref>
The Holy Family was a newly popular subject in small devotional paintings, reflecting increased theological and devotional interest in the role of [[Saint Joseph]]. One of the earliest examples of the new type is the painting by Joos dated to c. 1512 at the [[New York Metropolitan Museum of Art]]. This essentially reduced the figures from [[Jan van Eyck]]'s ''[[Lucca Madonna]]'' (c. 1435, [[Städel]], Frankfurt) to a close-up with domestic [[still life]] details, and added Saint Joseph over the Virgin's shoulder. The wine and fruits on the foreground are a reference to Christ's incarnation and future sacrifice. They also hint at the emerging genre of still-life painting in Flanders.<ref>[[James Snyder (art historian)|Snyder, James]]. ''Northern Renaissance Art'', 1985, p. 417, Harry N. Abrams, {{ISBN|0136235964}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.metmuseum.org/Collections/search-the-collections/436793 |title="The Holy Family", New York Metropolitan Museum of Art |publisher=Metmuseum.org |access-date=2019-01-15}}</ref>


Another of the many compositional types exists in very similar versions, one in the [[Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest]] and another sold at Sotheby's on 30 January 2014. It is full of charm and tenderness and was popular in his own time as well as with later collectors. The composition shows the Virgin with a brilliant red cloak, lined with fur and elaborately embroidered with pearls along the outside edge. The Virgin is seated in a loggia-like space with open windows through which a distant mountainous landscape is visible. She has her lips parted in a slight smile while she helps the Christ Child drink from a glass with red wine, a symbol of Christ's future suffering and blood and the [[Eucharist]]. Characteristic of Netherlandish painting of this period are the jewel-like colours and the details of the Virgin's costume and brocade pillow in the foreground.<ref>[http://www.sothebys.com/en/auctions/ecatalogue/2014/old-master-paintings-n09102/lot.11.html ''Virgin and Child''] at Sotheby's</ref>
Another of the many compositional types exists in very similar versions, one in the [[Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest]] and another sold at Sotheby's on 30 January 2014. It is full of charm and tenderness and was popular in his own time as well as with later collectors. The composition shows the Virgin with a brilliant red cloak, lined with fur and elaborately embroidered with pearls along the outside edge. The Virgin is seated in a loggia-like space with open windows through which a distant mountainous landscape is visible. She has her lips parted in a slight smile while she helps the Christ Child drink from a glass with red wine, a symbol of Christ's future suffering and blood and the [[Eucharist]]. Characteristic of Netherlandish painting of this period are the jewel-like colours and the details of the Virgin's costume and brocade pillow in the foreground.<ref>[http://www.sothebys.com/en/auctions/ecatalogue/2014/old-master-paintings-n09102/lot.11.html ''Virgin and Child''] at Sotheby's</ref>
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<gallery widths="180px" heights="200px">
<gallery widths="180px" heights="200px">
File:Joos van Cleve - Madonna and Sleeping Child in a Landscape.jpg|Madonna and Sleeping Child in a Landscape, 1515-1520
File:Joos van Cleve - Madonna and Sleeping Child in a Landscape.jpg|Madonna and Sleeping Child in a Landscape, 1515-1520
File:Joos van cleve, madonna col bambino.JPG|Genoa
File:Joos van cleve, madonna col bambino.JPG|Genoa, [[Palazzo Bianco]]
File:Joos van Cleve - Kirschenmadonna (Gemäldegalerie, Berlin).jpg|Leonardo-esque ''Madonna of the Cherries'', Berlin, c. 1525
File:Joos van Cleve - Kirschenmadonna (Gemäldegalerie, Berlin).jpg|Leonardo-esque ''Madonna of the Cherries'', Berlin, c. 1525
File:Joos van Cleve (c.1464-c.1540) - Virgin and Child - 104 - Fitzwilliam Museum.jpg|[[Fitzwilliam Museum]], c. 1525-30
File:Joos van Cleve (c.1464-c.1540) - Virgin and Child - 104 - Fitzwilliam Museum.jpg|[[Fitzwilliam Museum]], c. 1525-30
File:Joos van Cleve - Virgin and Child.jpg|With wine-drinking Child, sold [[Sotheby's]], 2014
File:Joos van Cleve - Virgin and child.jpg|With wine-drinking Child, sold [[Sotheby's]], 2014
File:Joos van Cleve - The Virgin in Prayer (Minneapolis Institute of Arts).jpg|''The Virgin in Prayer'', [[Minneapolis Institute of Arts]]
File:Joos van Cleve - The Virgin in Prayer (Minneapolis Institute of Arts).jpg|''The Virgin in Prayer'', [[Minneapolis Institute of Arts]]
File:Joos van Cleve - Mater Dolorosa - ILE1973.8.2 - Yale University Art Gallery.jpg||''The Virgin in Prayer'', Yale
File:Joos van Cleve - Mater Dolorosa - ILE1973.8.2 - Yale University Art Gallery.jpg|''The Virgin in Prayer'', Yale
File:The Holy Family MET DT3079.jpg|Another [[Holy Family]] type found in many versions
File:The Holy Family MET DT3079.jpg|Another [[Holy Family]] type found in many versions
</gallery>
</gallery>
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===Saint Jerome===
===Saint Jerome===
[[File:Joos van Cleve (follower of) - Der heilige Hieronymus im Gehäus.jpg|thumb|Horizontally extended second type, by a follower of Joos]]
[[File:Joos van Cleve (follower of) - Der heilige Hieronymus im Gehäus.jpg|thumb|Horizontally extended second type, by a follower of Joos]]
[[Saint Jerome]] became increasingly of interest and popular after the publication of [[Erasmus]]'s nine-volume set of his works, prefaced with a biography, in 1516, and the general increased interest in the text of the Bible. Jerome had compiled the [[Latin Vulgate]] which remained the official version of the [[Western church]] until the [[Protestant Reformation]] was well under way.<ref>Hand, 8</ref>
[[Saint Jerome]] became increasingly of interest and popular after the publication of [[Erasmus]]'s nine-volume set of his works, prefaced with a biography, in 1516, and the general increased interest in the text of the Bible. Jerome had compiled the [[Latin Vulgate]] which remained the official version of the [[Western church]] until the [[Protestant Reformation]] was well under way.<ref>Hand, 8</ref>


Paintings of Saint Jerome were produced by Joos and his workshop, apparently beginning in 1521, in three basic types: penitent amid a desert landscape, with his attribute of a lion; at bust or half-length in a cluttered study, often with a skull on his desk; and lastly in his study, naked to the waist and holding a rock. The first two are not original, and borrow in particular from [[Albrecht Dürer]]; the last, from the 1520s onwards, is an unusual combination of a figure type usually seen outdoors with the indoors study setting. In some versions of this type there are inscriptions referring to the [[Last Judgement]]. Various inscriptions in the second type, usually on the back wall, also exhort thoughts of death and judgement. The last type is probably known only from numerous workshop or later versions.<ref>Hand, 4-8</ref>
Paintings of Saint Jerome were produced by Joos and his workshop, apparently beginning in 1521, in three basic types: penitent amid a desert landscape, with his attribute of a lion; at bust or half-length in a cluttered study, often with a skull on his desk; and lastly in his study, naked to the waist and holding a rock. The first two are not original, and borrow in particular from [[Albrecht Dürer]]; the last, from the 1520s onwards, is an unusual combination of a figure type usually seen outdoors with the indoors study setting. In some versions of this type there are inscriptions referring to the [[Last Judgement]]. Various inscriptions in the second type, usually on the back wall, also exhort thoughts of death and judgement. The last type is probably known only from numerous workshop or later versions.<ref>Hand, 4–8</ref>


<gallery widths="180px" heights="200px">
<gallery widths="180px" heights="200px">
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===In chronological order===
===In chronological order===
*''The Holy Family'' (1515), Akademie der bildenden Kunste, Vienna
* ''The Holy Family'' (1515), Akademie der bildenden Kunste, Vienna
*''Saint Reinhold Altar'' (before 1516), [[National Museum, Warsaw|National Museum]], [[Warsaw]]
* ''Saint Reinhold Altar'' (before 1516), [[National Museum, Warsaw|National Museum]], [[Warsaw]]
*''Descent from the Cross'' (c. 1517–20), Philadelphia Museum of Art<ref>{{Cite web|title=Descent from the Cross by Joos van Cleve (cat. 373)|url=https://publications.philamuseum.org/entries/102143|last=Bay|first=Lucia, and Christopher D. M. Atkins|website=The John G. Johnson Collection: A History and Selected Works|publisher=A Philadelphia Museum of Art free digital publication|url-status=live}}</ref>
* ''Descent from the Cross'' (c. 1517–20), Philadelphia Museum of Art<ref>{{Cite web|title=Descent from the Cross by Joos van Cleve (cat. 373)|url=https://publications.philamuseum.org/entries/102143|last=Bay|first=Lucia, and Christopher D. M. Atkins|website=The John G. Johnson Collection: A History and Selected Works|publisher=A Philadelphia Museum of Art free digital publication}}</ref>
*''Triptych. Centre: the Deposition from the Cross; Left wing: St John the Baptist with a Donor; Right wing: St Margaret of Antioch with a Donatrix'' (1518-1519), National Galleries Scotland, Edinburgh<ref>[http://www.nationalgalleries.org/collection/artists-a-z/C/6187/artist_name/Joos%20van%20Cleve/record_id/2426 Triptych. Centre: the Deposition from the Cross; Left wing: St John the Baptist with a Donor; Right wing: St Margaret of Antioch with a Donatrix (1518-1519), National Galleries Scotland, Edinburgh]</ref>
* ''Triptych. Centre: the Deposition from the Cross; Left wing: St John the Baptist with a Donor; Right wing: St Margaret of Antioch with a Donatrix'' (1518–1519), National Galleries Scotland, Edinburgh<ref>[http://www.nationalgalleries.org/collection/artists-a-z/C/6187/artist_name/Joos%20van%20Cleve/record_id/2426 Triptych. Centre: the Deposition from the Cross; Left wing: St John the Baptist with a Donor; Right wing: St Margaret of Antioch with a Donatrix (1518–1519), National Galleries Scotland, Edinburgh]</ref>
*''Self-Portrait'' (1519), Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid
* ''Self-Portrait'' (1519), Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid
*''The Death of the Virgin'' (1520), Alte Pinakothek, Munich
* ''The Death of the Virgin'' (1520), Alte Pinakothek, Munich
*''[[:File:Cleve Joos van-Man with the Rosary normal.jpg|Man with the Rosary]]'' (1520), National Museum, Belgrade<ref>[http://www.terminartors.com/artworkprofile/Cleve_Joos_van-Man_with_the_Rosary Man with the Rosary (1520), National Museum, Belgrade] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002072207/http://www.terminartors.com/artworkprofile/Cleve_Joos_van-Man_with_the_Rosary |date=2 October 2011 }}</ref>
* ''[[:File:Cleve Joos van-Man with the Rosary normal.jpg|Man with the Rosary]]'' (1520), [[National Museum of Serbia]]<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.terminartors.com/artworkprofile/Cleve_Joos_van-Man_with_the_Rosary|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002072207/http://www.terminartors.com/artworkprofile/Cleve_Joos_van-Man_with_the_Rosary|url-status=dead|title=Man with the Rosary (1520), National Museum, Belgrade|archivedate=2 October 2011}}</ref>
*''Altarpiece of the Lamentation'' (1520–25), Musée du Louvre, Paris
* ''Altarpiece of the Lamentation'' (1520–25), Musée du Louvre, Paris
*''The Suicide of Lucretia'' (1520–25), Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna
* ''Lucretia'' (1520–25), Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna<ref>{{Cite web |title=Kunsthistorisches Museum / Lucretia |url=https://www.khm.at/en/object/482/ |access-date=January 14, 2024 |website=Kunsthistorisches Museum}}</ref>
*''Madonna of the Cherries'' (c1525), Bristol Museum and Art Gallery, Bristol, UK.
* ''Madonna of the Cherries'' (c1525), Bristol Museum and Art Gallery, Bristol, UK.
*''St. John the Evangelist on Patmos'' (1525), University of Michigan Museum of Art, [[Ann Arbor]]
* ''St. John the Evangelist on Patmos'' (1525), University of Michigan Museum of Art, [[Ann Arbor]]
*''Portrait of a Man and Woman'' (1520 and 1527), Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence
* ''Portrait of a Man and Woman'' (1520 and 1527), Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence
*''The Annunciation'' [http://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/436791] (1525), Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
* ''The Annunciation'' [http://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/436791] (1525), Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
*''[[:File:Joos van Cleve - The Infants Christ and Saint John the Baptist Embracing - WGA5040.jpg|The Infants Christ and Saint John the Baptist Embracing]]'' (1525–30), Art Institute, Chicago
* ''[[:File:Joos van Cleve - The Infants Christ and Saint John the Baptist Embracing - WGA5040.jpg|The Infants Christ and Saint John the Baptist Embracing]]'' (1525–30), Art Institute, Chicago
*''Adoration of the Magi'' (1526–28), Gemaldegalerie, Dresden
* ''Adoration of the Magi'' (1526–28), Gemaldegalerie, Dresden
*''Saint Jerome in his Study'' (1528),Vassar College, Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center, Poughkeepsie, New York
* ''Saint Jerome in his Study'' (1528), Vassar College, Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center, Poughkeepsie, New York
*''Portrait of Eleonora, Queen of France'' (1530), Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna
* ''Portrait of Eleonora, Queen of France'' (1530), Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna
*''Virgin and Child'' (1535), Landesmuseum, Oldenburg
* ''Virgin and Child'' (1535), Landesmuseum, Oldenburg
*''Madonna and Child against the renaissance background'' (c. 1535), [[Palace Museum in Wilanów|Museum of King Jan III's Palace]] at [[Wilanów]], [[Warsaw]]
* ''Madonna and Child against the renaissance background'' (c. 1535), [[Palace Museum in Wilanów|Museum of King Jan III's Palace]] at [[Wilanów]], [[Warsaw]]


===Dates unknown===
===Dates unknown===
*''Death of the Virgin'', Wallraf-Richartz Museum, Cologne
* ''Death of the Virgin'', Wallraf-Richartz Museum, Cologne
*''The Holy Family'', The Hermitage, St. Petersburg
* ''The Holy Family'', The Hermitage, St. Petersburg
*''Mona Vanna'', National Gallery, Prague
* ''Mona Vanna'', National Gallery, Prague
*''Portrait of Agniete ven den Rijne'', Rijksmuseum Twenthe, Enschede
* ''Portrait of Agniete ven den Rijne'', Rijksmuseum Twenthe, Enschede
*''Portrait of Anthonis van Hilten'', Rijksmuseum Twenthe, Enschede
* ''Portrait of Anthonis van Hilten'', Rijksmuseum Twenthe, Enschede
*''St. Anne with the Virgin and Child and St. Joachim'', Musee Royaux des Beaux-Arts, Brussels
* ''St. Anne with the Virgin and Child and St. Joachim'', Musee Royaux des Beaux-Arts, Brussels
*''Virgin and Child'', Szepmuveszeti Muzeum, Budapest
* ''Virgin and Child'', Szepmuveszeti Muzeum, Budapest
*''Triptych of Saint Peter, Saint Paul and Saint Andrew'', Museu de Arte Sacra do Funchal
* ''Triptych of Saint Peter, Saint Paul and Saint Andrew'', Museu de Arte Sacra do Funchal


==Notes==
==Notes==
Line 121: Line 124:


==References==
==References==
*Hand, John Oliver. ""Saint Jerome in His Study" by Joos Van Cleve." ''Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University'' 49, no. 2 (1990): 3-10. Accessed January 4, 2021. doi:10.2307/3774675, [https://www.jstor.org/stable/3774675 JSTOR]
* Hand, John Oliver. ""Saint Jerome in His Study" by Joos Van Cleve." ''Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University'' 49, no. 2 (1990): 3–10. Accessed January 4, 2021. doi:10.2307/3774675, [https://www.jstor.org/stable/3774675 JSTOR]
*Leeflang, Micha. "Joos Van Cleve's "Adoration of the Magi" in Detroit: Revealing the Underdrawing," ''Bulletin of the Detroit Institute of Arts'' 82, no. 1/2 (2008): 60-75. Accessed January 3, 2021. [https://www.jstor.org/stable/23183284 JSTOR]
* Leeflang, Micha. "Joos Van Cleve's "Adoration of the Magi" in Detroit: Revealing the Underdrawing," ''Bulletin of the Detroit Institute of Arts'' 82, no. 1/2 (2008): 60–75. Accessed January 3, 2021. [https://www.jstor.org/stable/23183284 JSTOR]
*[[James Snyder (art historian)|Snyder, James]]. ''Northern Renaissance Art'', 1985, Harry N. Abrams, {{ISBN|0136235964}}
* [[James Snyder (art historian)|Snyder, James]]. ''Northern Renaissance Art'', 1985, Harry N. Abrams, {{ISBN|0136235964}}


==External links==
==External links==
*{{commons category-inline|Joos van Cleve|Joos van Cleve}}
*{{Commons-inline}}


{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control (arts)}}


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[[Category:People from Kleve]]
[[Category:People from Kleve]]
[[Category:Flemish Mannerist painters]]
[[Category:Flemish Mannerist painters]]
[[Category:Catholic painters]]
[[Category:Painters from Antwerp]]
[[Category:Pupils and followers of Leonardo da Vinci]]

Latest revision as of 17:58, 22 March 2024

Self-Portrait

Joos van Cleve (/ˈklvə/;[1] also Joos van der Beke; c. 1485–1490 – 1540/1541) was a leading painter active in Antwerp from his arrival there around 1511 until his death in 1540 or 1541. Within Dutch and Flemish Renaissance painting, he combines the traditional techniques of Early Netherlandish painting with influences of more contemporary Renaissance painting styles.[2]

An active member and co-deacon of the Guild of Saint Luke of Antwerp, he is known mostly for his religious works and portraits, some of royalty. He ran a large workshop, with at least five pupils and other assistants, which produced paintings in a variety of styles over his career.[3] As a skilled technician, his art shows sensitivity to color and a unique solidarity of figures.[4] His style is highly eclectic: he was one of the first to introduce broad world landscapes in the backgrounds of his paintings, sometimes collaborating with Joachim Patinir, which would become a popular technique of sixteenth century northern Renaissance paintings. Some works reflect the popular style of Antwerp Mannerism, while others are variations on early Netherlandish masters of two or more generations before, or reflect recent Italian painting.[5]

Four of his more important paintings have the monogram "JB", presumably for Joos van der Beke, rather inconspicuously placed. In three other works a self-portrait is placed among the minor figures.[6] From the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries, the name of Joos van Cleve as an artist was lost. Some of the paintings now attributed to Joos van Cleve were, at that time, known as the works of the "Master of the Death of the Virgin", after the triptych in the Wallraf-Richartz-Museum in Cologne. In 1894 it was discovered that the monogram on the back of the triptych was that of Joos van der Beke, the real name of Joos van Cleve.[7] His oeuvre was reconstructed in the 1920s and 1930s by Ludwig von Baldass and Max Jakob Friedländer.[8] Now over 300 works are generally attributed to him or his workshop, which vary considerably in both quality and style.[9]

He was the father of Cornelis van Cleve (1520–1567) who also became a painter, and inherited the workshop.[9] Cornelis became mentally ill during a residence in England and was therefore referred to as 'Sotte Cleef' (mad Cleef).[7][10]

Life[edit]

Altarpiece of the Lamentation, 1520–1525

Joos van Cleve was born around 1485–90. The birthplace of Joos van Cleve is not precisely known. In various Antwerp legal documents he is referred to as 'Joos van der Beke alias van Cleve'. It is therefore likely that he came from the Lower Rhenish region or city named Kleve (in traditional English "Cleves"), from which his name is derived. It is assumed that he began his artistic training around 1505 in the workshop of Jan Joest, whom he assisted in the panel paintings of the wings for the high altar of the Nikolaikirche in Kalkar, Lower Rhine, Germany,[11] from 1506 to 1509. These include one of his self-portraits. From this a birth date of about 1485 to 1490 is inferred.[12]

Joos van Cleve is believed to have moved to Bruges between 1507 and 1511 since his painting style is similar to that of the painters of Bruges.[10] Later he moved to Antwerp, and in 1511 became a free master in the Antwerp Guild of Saint Luke. He was co-deacon of the guild for several years around 1520, along with registering pupils there at various dates between 1516 and 1536.[7] In 1528 he bought a house from his wife's parents. As there are no records of his being in Antwerp between 1529 and 1534, it is possible he spent some of this time in Italy or France at the court, or even London.[13][10]

From surviving documents it is clear that he was alive in Antwerp on 10 November 1540 and dead by 4 February 1541.[14]

Personal life[edit]

He had two children from his first marriage, a daughter and a son. His son named Cornelis (1520) became a painter. Although the date of his death is unknown, Joos van Cleve drew up a will and testament on 10 November 1540, and his second wife was listed as a widow in April 1541.[7]

There are a number of other "van Cleef" Antwerp painters recorded from his time, some of whom may have been relatives.

Work[edit]

Adoration of the Magi triptych, apparently the prime version, Museo di Capodimonte, Naples, c. 1515

Compositions were often copied, repeated or adapted; for example at least six versions of an Adoration of the Magi triptych composition by him and his workshop are known, though varying considerably in size, with the widths of the centre panel ranging from 56 to 93 cm.[9] This probably reflected different intended sites for the paintings, from private house chapels to churches.[15]

Numerous paintings contain heraldry, which often enables the customers to be identified, including eleven of the twenty-one altarpieces attributed to the workshop. In other works the identity of local saints gives clues. Antwerp was the centre of European trade in the period, and the Antwerp merchant class was highly cosmopolitan. Five paintings can be linked with Italy, especially Genoa, and others to Cologne (three altarpieces) and Danzig in Germany, and four to various Netherlandish cities. Others have the arms of his homeland Mark-Cleves, the territories of John III, Duke of Cleves, and the Holy Roman Empire, suggesting the duke or a close courtier. Three paintings delivered to King Francois I of France are recorded.[16]

The great majority of his work is religious subjects or portraits, with the main exceptions being versions of the Suicide of Lucretia, and a Leonardo-esque half-length nude, the Mona Vanna in the National Gallery in Prague.

In January 2021 an episode the BBC Four series Britain's Lost Masterpieces, centred on the fine art collection of the Royal Pavilion in Brighton, uncovered a work of Joos van Cleve, a portrayal of Balthazar, previously attributed to Bernard van Orley. The painting had once been the left-hand door of a folding altarpiece triptych.[17][18]

Artistic influences[edit]

The influence of Kalkar and Bruges are seen in many of Joos van Cleve's early works, such as Adam and Eve (1507). The Death of the Virgin (1520) shows the combined influence of several artists. It has the intense emotionality of Hugo van der Goes, and iconographic ideas of Jan van Eyck and Robert Campin. A strong influence of Italian art combined with Joos van Cleve's own color and light sensitivity make his works especially unique. The "Antwerp Mannerist" style is identifiable in the Adoration of the Magi. It is thought that the "Antwerp Mannerists" were in turn influenced by Joos van Cleve.

Like Quentin Matsys, a fellow artist active in Antwerp, Joos van Cleve appropriated themes and techniques of Leonardo da Vinci. This is apparent in the use of sfumato in the Virgin and Child. Multiple versions of a soft, sentimental Madonna and Child and the Holy Family were discovered, produced in his workshop.[7]

Royal portraits[edit]

Joos van Cleve's skills as a portrait artist were highly regarded as demonstrated by a summons to the court of Francis I of France. There he painted the king (Philadelphia Museum of Art), the queen Eleanor of Austria (Kunsthistorisches Museum) and other members of the court.[7] His portrait of Henry VIII of England is of comparable size to that of Francis I (72.1 x 59.2 cm) and the compositions and costumes in both portraits are similar. Some historians have interpreted this as evidence that the portraits were pendants painted to commemorate the meeting of the two kings in Calais and Boulogne on 21 and 29 October 1532, which Joos might possibly have witnessed. Other historians have proposed the alternative view that van Cleve based the Henry VIII portrait on that of Francis I without meeting the English king. He may have hoped that this gesture might earn him English royal commissions in future.[20]

Virgin and Child and Holy Family[edit]

The Holy Family, Metropolitan Museum of Art

Small devotional pictures of the Virgin Mary were the bread and butter work of early 15th century painting workshops, and Joos van Cleve produced many different types of the Virgin and Child, the Holy Family and the Virgin and Child with St Anne. In some instances the prime version has been lost, but the type can be recovered through the numerous replicas produced by his workshop and copyists. Most of these were no doubt produced with no specific commission, with many distributed by agents and dealers across Europe, for the houses of the wealthy.

The Holy Family was a newly popular subject in small devotional paintings, reflecting increased theological and devotional interest in the role of Saint Joseph. One of the earliest examples of the new type is the painting by Joos dated to c. 1512 at the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art. This essentially reduced the figures from Jan van Eyck's Lucca Madonna (c. 1435, Städel, Frankfurt) to a close-up with domestic still life details, and added Saint Joseph over the Virgin's shoulder. The wine and fruits on the foreground are a reference to Christ's incarnation and future sacrifice. They also hint at the emerging genre of still-life painting in Flanders.[21][22]

Another of the many compositional types exists in very similar versions, one in the Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest and another sold at Sotheby's on 30 January 2014. It is full of charm and tenderness and was popular in his own time as well as with later collectors. The composition shows the Virgin with a brilliant red cloak, lined with fur and elaborately embroidered with pearls along the outside edge. The Virgin is seated in a loggia-like space with open windows through which a distant mountainous landscape is visible. She has her lips parted in a slight smile while she helps the Christ Child drink from a glass with red wine, a symbol of Christ's future suffering and blood and the Eucharist. Characteristic of Netherlandish painting of this period are the jewel-like colours and the details of the Virgin's costume and brocade pillow in the foreground.[23]

A new devotional type of the Virgin alone, her hands clasped in prayer, also appears in many versions. This may be called a Mater Dolorosa.

Saint Jerome[edit]

Horizontally extended second type, by a follower of Joos

Saint Jerome became increasingly of interest and popular after the publication of Erasmus's nine-volume set of his works, prefaced with a biography, in 1516, and the general increased interest in the text of the Bible. Jerome had compiled the Latin Vulgate which remained the official version of the Western church until the Protestant Reformation was well under way.[24]

Paintings of Saint Jerome were produced by Joos and his workshop, apparently beginning in 1521, in three basic types: penitent amid a desert landscape, with his attribute of a lion; at bust or half-length in a cluttered study, often with a skull on his desk; and lastly in his study, naked to the waist and holding a rock. The first two are not original, and borrow in particular from Albrecht Dürer; the last, from the 1520s onwards, is an unusual combination of a figure type usually seen outdoors with the indoors study setting. In some versions of this type there are inscriptions referring to the Last Judgement. Various inscriptions in the second type, usually on the back wall, also exhort thoughts of death and judgement. The last type is probably known only from numerous workshop or later versions.[25]

Works (very incomplete list)[edit]

Mona Vanna

In chronological order[edit]

  • The Holy Family (1515), Akademie der bildenden Kunste, Vienna
  • Saint Reinhold Altar (before 1516), National Museum, Warsaw
  • Descent from the Cross (c. 1517–20), Philadelphia Museum of Art[26]
  • Triptych. Centre: the Deposition from the Cross; Left wing: St John the Baptist with a Donor; Right wing: St Margaret of Antioch with a Donatrix (1518–1519), National Galleries Scotland, Edinburgh[27]
  • Self-Portrait (1519), Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid
  • The Death of the Virgin (1520), Alte Pinakothek, Munich
  • Man with the Rosary (1520), National Museum of Serbia[28]
  • Altarpiece of the Lamentation (1520–25), Musée du Louvre, Paris
  • Lucretia (1520–25), Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna[29]
  • Madonna of the Cherries (c1525), Bristol Museum and Art Gallery, Bristol, UK.
  • St. John the Evangelist on Patmos (1525), University of Michigan Museum of Art, Ann Arbor
  • Portrait of a Man and Woman (1520 and 1527), Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence
  • The Annunciation [1] (1525), Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
  • The Infants Christ and Saint John the Baptist Embracing (1525–30), Art Institute, Chicago
  • Adoration of the Magi (1526–28), Gemaldegalerie, Dresden
  • Saint Jerome in his Study (1528), Vassar College, Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center, Poughkeepsie, New York
  • Portrait of Eleonora, Queen of France (1530), Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna
  • Virgin and Child (1535), Landesmuseum, Oldenburg
  • Madonna and Child against the renaissance background (c. 1535), Museum of King Jan III's Palace at Wilanów, Warsaw

Dates unknown[edit]

  • Death of the Virgin, Wallraf-Richartz Museum, Cologne
  • The Holy Family, The Hermitage, St. Petersburg
  • Mona Vanna, National Gallery, Prague
  • Portrait of Agniete ven den Rijne, Rijksmuseum Twenthe, Enschede
  • Portrait of Anthonis van Hilten, Rijksmuseum Twenthe, Enschede
  • St. Anne with the Virgin and Child and St. Joachim, Musee Royaux des Beaux-Arts, Brussels
  • Virgin and Child, Szepmuveszeti Muzeum, Budapest
  • Triptych of Saint Peter, Saint Paul and Saint Andrew, Museu de Arte Sacra do Funchal

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ "Cleve". Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary.
  2. ^ "Rijksmuseum: Joos van Cleve". Archived from the original on 3 February 2012. Retrieved 20 April 2011.
  3. ^ Leeflang, 62–63, 71
  4. ^ Hand, John Oliver (2005). Joos Van Cleve: The Complete Paintings. Yale University Press. p. 1. ISBN 0-300-10578-9.
  5. ^ Snyder, 412–418
  6. ^ Leeflang, 61–63, 71
  7. ^ a b c d e f Campbell, Lorne (2000). The fifteenth century Netherlandish paintings : National Gallery catalogues (Repr. ed.). New Haven: Yale Univ. Press. ISBN 0-300-07701-7.
  8. ^ Hand, 4
  9. ^ a b c Leeflang, 63
  10. ^ a b c Joos van Cleve at the Netherlands Institute for Art History (in Dutch)
  11. ^ John Oliver Hand. "Cleve, van (i)." Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press. Web. 25 March 2015
  12. ^ Leeflang, 62–63; Hand, 3
  13. ^ Hand, 3
  14. ^ Leeflang, 62–63
  15. ^ Leeflang, 71
  16. ^ Leeflang, 69–71
  17. ^ "Britain's Lost Masterpieces – Series 5: 1. Brighton" – via www.bbc.co.uk.
  18. ^ "Balthazar | Art UK".
  19. ^ Snyder, 418
  20. ^ Joos van Cleve (active 1505/08-1540/41), Henry VIII at the Royal Collection
  21. ^ Snyder, James. Northern Renaissance Art, 1985, p. 417, Harry N. Abrams, ISBN 0136235964
  22. ^ ""The Holy Family", New York Metropolitan Museum of Art". Metmuseum.org. Retrieved 15 January 2019.
  23. ^ Virgin and Child at Sotheby's
  24. ^ Hand, 8
  25. ^ Hand, 4–8
  26. ^ Bay, Lucia, and Christopher D. M. Atkins. "Descent from the Cross by Joos van Cleve (cat. 373)". The John G. Johnson Collection: A History and Selected Works. A Philadelphia Museum of Art free digital publication.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  27. ^ Triptych. Centre: the Deposition from the Cross; Left wing: St John the Baptist with a Donor; Right wing: St Margaret of Antioch with a Donatrix (1518–1519), National Galleries Scotland, Edinburgh
  28. ^ "Man with the Rosary (1520), National Museum, Belgrade". Archived from the original on 2 October 2011.
  29. ^ "Kunsthistorisches Museum / Lucretia". Kunsthistorisches Museum. Retrieved 14 January 2024.

References[edit]

  • Hand, John Oliver. ""Saint Jerome in His Study" by Joos Van Cleve." Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University 49, no. 2 (1990): 3–10. Accessed January 4, 2021. doi:10.2307/3774675, JSTOR
  • Leeflang, Micha. "Joos Van Cleve's "Adoration of the Magi" in Detroit: Revealing the Underdrawing," Bulletin of the Detroit Institute of Arts 82, no. 1/2 (2008): 60–75. Accessed January 3, 2021. JSTOR
  • Snyder, James. Northern Renaissance Art, 1985, Harry N. Abrams, ISBN 0136235964

External links[edit]