The High Renaissance
 
&

Mannerism

 


 

 


Maerten van Heemskerck
 
 
 

 

Maerten van Heemskerck

born 1498, Heemskerck, Holland
died 1574, Haarlem


one of the leading Mannerist painters in 16th-century Holland working in the Italianate manner.

He spent a period (c. 1528) in the Haarlemstudio of Jan van Scorel, then lately returned from Italy. Van Heemskerck's earliest works—“Ecce Homo” (Musee des Beaux-Arts, Ghent) and “St. Luke Painting the Portrait of the Virgin” (Frans Halsmuseum, Haarlem), both dated 1532—while adhering closely to the Romanist style of Scorel, seek to outdo it by dramatic lighting and illusionistic effects of plasticity.

From 1532 to 1535 he was in Rome, recording in innumerable sketches, some of which are preserved in Berlin, the architecture and sculpture of classical antiquity and the painting of the High Renaissance. Of the latter he directed his attention particularly to the frescoes of Michelangelo in the Sistine Chapel and those of Raphael in the Villa Farnesina.

Throughout the rest of his long career, which was spent almost exclusively in Haarlem, he drew liberally on this garnered store of Roman motifs. Among the more notable of the religious paintings of his maturity are a great “Crucifixion” altarpiece (1538–43; Linkoping cathedral, Sweden) and a “Crucifixion” (1543, Ghent). He also painted portraits, among them a self-portrait with the Colosseum (1553; Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, Eng.) and the well-known “Portrait of a Woman at the Spinning Wheel” (Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam). From 1548 onward he produced many designs for engravings.

        
             


The Erythraean Sibyl
1564

 
 

 


St Luke Painting the Virgin

1550-53
Oil on canvas, 206 x 144 cm
Musee des Beaux-Arts, Rennes


 

 

Self-Portrait in Rome with the Colosseum

1553
Wood, 42 x 54 cm
Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge


 

Triptych

Oil on wood
Cathedral, Linkoping


 

Landscape with St. Jerome
1547