Hieronymus Bosch The Last Judgement Essay

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Sin and folly are two concepts that play a major role in the artwork of Hieronymus Bosch. Two of his most famous works The Garden of Earthly Delights and The Haywain Triptych both deal with sin and The Last Judgment is no exception. The significance of his use of sin and folly can be fully appreciated by examining and analyzing The Last Judgment. A very common theme in medieval and renaissance religious artwork, The Last Judgment “marks the final act of the long, turbulent history of mankind which began with the Fall of Adam and Eve and their expulsion from Eden.” 1 It is the supposed day when the dead shall rise from their graves and Christ shall come a second time to judge all men, rewarding each according to his merits. 1 As Christ himself …show more content…

James and the right depicting St. Bavo, are both painted in grisaille, a typical style of painting for many Flemish contemporary triptychs where everything is painted in near or complete monochrome. The left of the two shutters depicting St. James, shows the Saint in pilgrimage on the Road of Life. He is depicted carrying the symbols associated with him: the staff, the large-brimmed hat and, on it, the scallop shell, his special identification. The background details have been described as carrying “significant reference: on the top left reminding the faithful of death as punishment in life; in the middle left, the long and difficult journey of the blind, hall and lame; and on the right the warning of robbers and murderers on the path through life.”1 The right of the shutters depicting St. Bavo, the patron Saint of Flanders, donating to the poor with his hawk on his left …show more content…

Surprisingly enough, the actual judgment itself takes up only a small portion of the central panel. Heaven is represented as a small blue orb with Christ in its center. The majority of the panel shows the earth in shambles where countless sinners left behind are being tortured in cruel and bizarre ways. Bosch’s style is unique in this depiction because creatures of this nature had not yet been seen in large-scale Flemish painting. However, similar figures did appear in the illuminated manuscripts of the Middle Ages, such as the Hours of Catherine of Cleves (Gibson 57). This 15th century manuscript features an image of hell, which contains creatures that resemble Bosch’s own. (Figure Y). For example, the main figure features a beast, whose mouth makes up the face of another monster. (See Detail) These bizarre morphing of figures in illuminated manuscripts are precursors to Bosch’s full-scale, nightmarish painting

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