The Flemish Masters collection is developed in collaboration with the Royal Fine Art Museums of Belgium art shop. The Bosch model represents a detail of one of the masterpieces of the museum (the MailBird in « The Temptation of Tt Anthony »), and is the mascot of the museum’s shop.
The Bosch model represents a detail of one of the masterpieces of the museum : "The Temptation of St Anthony" and that bizare and funny Mailbird (L'oiseau-facteur) is the mascot of the museum's shop.
A great example of a Shared model personalized for one museum.
In project : Pieter Bruegel
The Flemish school, art of the 15th, 16th, and early 17th centuries in Flanders and in the surrounding regions, is known for its vibrant materialism and unsurpassed technical skill. From Hubert and Jan van Eyck through Pieter Bruegel the Elder to Peter Paul Rubens, the Flemish painters were masters of the oil medium and used it primarily to portray a robust and realistically detailed vision of the world around them.
Hiëronymus Bosch, also spelled Jheronimus Bos, (born c. 1450, ’s-Hertogenbosch, Brabant [now in the Netherlands]—buried August 9, 1516, ’s-Hertogenbosch), brilliant and original northern European painter whose work reveals an unusual iconography of a complex and individual style. He was recognized as a highly imaginative “creator of devils” and a powerful inventor of seeming nonsense full of satirical and moralizing meaning.
To Bosch’s fruitful middle period belong the great panoramic triptychs such as the Haywain, The Temptation of St. Anthony, and The Garden of Earthly Delights.
In project : Pieter Bruegel
Our Flemish Masters model is on sale at the Royal Fine Arts Museum (Brussels) and the Boghossian Foundation (Brussels). For direct sales, please refer to our « services ».