van Eyck
Netherlandish family of artists. The brothers Hubert van Eyck, Jan van Eyck and Lambert van Eyck were all painters; a sister, Margaret, was also
identified as a painter by van Vaernewijck (1568), who
recorded that she was unmarried and was buried next to
Hubert in Ghent. The tradition that the family
originated in Maaseick [Maeseyck], near Maastricht,
seems confirmed by the dialect of Jan van Eyck’s motto
and colour notes on his portrait drawing of a man
(Dresden, Kupferstichkab.) and by his gift of vestments
to a convent in Maaseick, where his daughter Lievine
became a nun. The family belonged to the gentry: the
armorials of Jan’s epitaph in St Bavo’s, Ghent, showed
that his father or grandfather came from Brabant,
perhaps near ’s Hertogenbosch, and married a woman from
a Mosan family. It is possible that Barthelemy d’Eyck,
court painter to King René I of Anjou, belonged to the
same family.
(Encyclopaedia Britannica)
Jan
van Eyck
born before 1395, , Maaseik, Bishopric of Liège, Holy
Roman Empire [now in Belgium]
died , before July 9, 1441, Bruges
Flemish painter who perfected the newly developed
technique of oil painting. His naturalistic panel
paintings, mostly portraits and religious subjects, made
extensive use of disguised religious symbols.
Hismasterpiece is the altarpiece in the cathedral at
Ghent, the “Adoration of the Lamb” (also called “Ghent
Altarpiece,” 1432 [see ]). Hubert van Eyck is thought by
some to have been Jan's brother.
Jan van Eyck must have been born before 1395, for in
October 1422 he is recorded as the varlet de chambre et
peintre (“honorary equerry and painter”) of John of
Bavaria, count of Holland. He continued to work in the
palace of The Hague until the count's death in 1425 and
then settled briefly in Bruges before he was summoned,
that summer, to Lille to serve Philip the Good, duke of
Burgundy, the most powerful ruler and foremost patron of
the arts in Flanders. Jan remained in the duke's employ
until his death. On behalf of his sponsor he undertook a
number of secret missions during the next decade, of
which the most notable were two journeys to the Iberian
Peninsula, the first in 1427 to try to contract a
marriage for Philip with Isabella of Spain and a more
successful trip in 1428–29 to seek the hand of Isabella
of Portugal. As a confidant of Philip, Jan may have
participated directly in these marriage negotiations,
but he also was charged to present the duke with a
portrait of the intended.
In 1431 Jan purchased a house in Bruges and, about the
same time, married a woman named Margaret, about whom
little more is known than that she was born in 1406 and
was to bear him at least two children. Residing in
Bruges, Jan continued to paint, and in 1436 he again
made a secret voyage for Philip. After his death in 1441
he was buried in the Church of Saint-Donatian, in
Bruges.
Securely attributed paintings survive only from the last
decade of Jan's career; therefore, his artistic origins
and early development must be deduced from his mature
work. Traditionally, Jan has been acclaimed the founder
of Flemishpainting, and scholars have sought his
artistic roots in the last great phase of medieval
manuscript illumination. It is clear that the naturalism
and elegant composition of Jan's later painting owe much
to such early 15th-century illuminators as the anonymous
Boucicaut Master and Pol, Herman, and Jehanequin de
Limburg (the “Limburg Brothers”), who worked for the
Burgundian dukes. A document of 1439 reports that Jan
van Eyck paid an illuminator for preparing a book for
the duke; but central to the discussion of his ties to
manuscript illustration has been the attribution to Jan
of several miniatures, identified as Hand G, in a
problematic prayer book known as the Turin-Milan Hours (Museo
Civico, Turin, Italy). So long as these “Eyckian”
miniatures were dated in the 1420s or even earlier,
Jan's authorship seemed indubitable; but recent
investigations strongly indicate that these miniatures
were painted at least 20 years later and, hence, that
they are by an imitator. With the elimination of the
Turin-Milan Hours from Jan van Eyck's early oeuvre, his
connections with International Gothic style illumination
appear to have been less direct than had been thought.
Certainly as important for Jan's artistic formation were
the panel paintings of Robert Campin (c. 1378–1444), a
Tournai painter whose important role in the history of
Flemish art hasonly recently been reestablished. Jan
must have met Campinat least once, when he was feted by
the Tournai painter's guild in 1427, and from Campin's
art he seems to have learned the bold realism, the
method of disguised symbolism, and perhaps the luminous
oil technique that became so characteristic of his own
style. In contrast to Campin, who was a Tournai burgher,
Jan was a learned master at work in a busy court, and he
signed his paintings, the first Flemish artist to do so.
The majority of Jan's panels present the proud
inscription “IOHANNES DE EYCK,” and several bear his
aristocratic motto, “Als ich chan” (“As best I can”). It
is small wonder that Campin's reputation faded and his
influence on Jan was forgotten, and it is of little
surprise that many of Campin's achievements were
credited to the younger master.
Despite Jan van Eyck's having signed 9 paintings and
dated 10, the establishment of his oeuvre and the
reconstruction ofits chronology present problems. The
major difficulty is that Jan's masterpiece, the
“Adoration of the Lamb” altarpiece, has a wholly
questionable inscription that introduces Hubert van Eyck
as its principal master. This has caused art historians
to turn to less ambitious but more secure works to plot
Jan's development, including, most notably: the
“Portrait of a Young Man” (“Leal Souvenir”) of 1432,
“The Marriage of Giovanni Arnolfini and Giovanna Cenami
(?)” of 1434, the “Madonna with Canon van der Paele” of
1434–36, the triptych “Madonna and Child with Saints” of
1437, and the panels of “St. Barbara” and the “Madonna
at the Fountain,” dated, respectively, 1437 and 1439.
Although they fall within a brief span of seven years,
these paintings present a consistent development in
which Jan moved from the heavy, sculptural realism
associated with Robert Campinto a more delicate, rather
precious, pictorial style.
On stylistic grounds there seems little difficulty in
placing the “Ghent Altarpiece” at the head of this
development as indicated by the date 1432 in the
inscription, but the question of Hubert's participation
in this great work has yet to be resolved. The
inscription itself is definite about this point: “The
painter Hubert van Eyck, greater than whom no one was
found, began [this work]; and Jan, his brother, second
in art [carried] through the task . . . ” On the basis
of this claim, art historians have attempted to
distinguish Hubert's contribution to the “Ghent
Altarpiece” and have even assigned to him certain of the
more archaic “Eyckian” paintings, including “The
Annunciation” (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
City) and “The Three Marys at the Tomb” (Museum Boymans-van
Beuningen, Rotterdam). A problem arises, however,
because the inscription itself is a 16th-century
transcription, and earlier references make no mention of
Hubert. Albrecht Dürer, for instance, praised only Jan
van Eyck during his visit to Ghent in 1521; and as late
as 1562 the Flemish historian Marcus van Vaernewyck
referred to Jan alone as the creator of the altarpiece.
Furthermore, a recent philological study casts serious
doubt on the dependability of the inscription. Thus,
Hubert's participation is highly suspect, and any
knowledge of his art must await new discoveries.
On the other hand, there is little doubt that Hubert did
exist. A “meester Hubrechte de scildere” (Master Hubert,
the painter) is mentioned three times in the City
Archives of Ghent, and a transcription of his epitaph
reports that he died on Sept. 18, 1426. Whether this
Hubert van Eyck was related to Jan and why in the 16th
century he was credited with the major share of the
“Ghent Altarpiece” are questions that remain unanswered.
The confusion concerning his relationship to Hubert, the
doubt about his activities as an illuminator, and the
reemergence of Robert Campin as a preeminent master do
not diminish the achievement and significance of Jan van
Eyck. He may not have invented painting with oils as
early writers asserted, but he perfected the technique
to mirror thetextures, light, and spatial effects of
nature. The realism of his paintings—admired as early as
1449 by the Italian humanist Cyriacus D'Ancona, who
observed that the works seemed to have been produced
“not by the artifice of humanhands but by all-bearing
nature herself”—has never been surpassed. For Jan, as
for Campin, naturalism was not merelya technical tour de
force, however. For him, nature embodied God, and so he
filled his paintings with religious symbols disguised as
everyday objects. Even the light that so naturally
illuminates Jan van Eyck's landscapes and interiorsis a
metaphor of the Divine.
Because of the refinement of his technique and the
abstruseness of his symbolic programs, the successors of
Jan van Eyck borrowed only selectively from his art.
Campin's foremost student, Rogier van der Weyden,
tempered his master's homey realism with Eyckian grace
and delicacy; in fact, at the end of his career, Campin
himselfsuccumbed somewhat to Jan's courtly style. Even
Petrus Christus, who may have been apprenticed in Jan's
atelier andwho finished the “Virgin and Child, with
Saints and Donor” (Frick Collection, New York City)
after Jan's death, quickly abandoned the intricacies of
Jan's style under the influence of Rogier. During the
last third of the century, the Netherlandish painters
Hugo van der Goes and Justus van Gent revived the
Eyckian heritage, but, when such early 16th-century
Flemish masters as Quentin Massys and Jan Mabuse turned
to Jan's work, they produced pious copies that had
little impact on their original creations. In Germany
and France the influence of Jan van Eyck was
overshadowed by the more accessible styles of Campin and
Rogier, and only in the Iberian Peninsula—which Jan had
visited twice—did his art dominate. In Italy his
greatness was recognized by Cyriacus and by the humanist
Bartolomeo Facio, who lists Jan—together with Rogier and
the Italian artists Pisanello and Gentile da Fabriano—as
one of the leading painters of the period. But
Renaissance artists, as painters elsewhere, found him
easier to admire than to imitate.
Interest in his painting and acknowledgment of his
prodigious technical accomplishment have remained high.
Jan's works have been copied frequently and have been
avidly collected. He is referred to in the Treaty of
Versailles, which specifies the return of the “Ghent
Altarpiece” to Belgium before peace with Germany could
be concluded after the end of World War I.
Herbert Leon Kessler
(Encyclopaedia Britannica)