Modern
viewers take for granted the pictorial conventions present in easel
paintings and engraved prints of such subjects as landscapes or
peasants. These generic subjects and their representational conventions,
however, have their own origins and early histories. In
sixteenth-century Antwerp, painting and the emerging new medium of
engraving began to depart from traditional visual culture, which had
been defined primarily by wall paintings, altarpieces, and portraits of
the elite. New genres and new media arose simultaneously in this
volatile commercial and financial capital of Europe, home to the first
open art market near the city Bourse. The new pictorial subjects emerged
first as hybrid images, dominated by religious themes but also
including elements that later became pictorial categories in their own
right: landscapes, food markets, peasants at work and play, and
still-life compositions. In addition to being the place of the origin
and evolution of these genres, the Antwerp art market gave rise to the
concept of artistic identity, in which favorite forms and favorite
themes by an individual artist gained consumer recognition.
In Peasant Scenes and Landscapes,
Larry Silver examines the emergence of pictorial kinds—scenes of
taverns and markets, landscapes and peasants—and charts their evolution
as genres from initial hybrids to more conventionalized artistic
formulas. The relationship of these new genres and their favorite themes
reflect a burgeoning urbanism and capitalism in Antwerp, and Silver
analyzes how pictorial genres and the Antwerp marketplace fostered the
development of what has come to be known as "signature" artistic style.
By examining Bosch and Bruegel, together with their imitators, he
focuses on pictorial innovation as well as the marketing of individual
styles, attending particularly to the growing practice of artists
signing their works. In addition, he argues that consumer interest in
the style of individual artists reinforced another phenomenon of the
later sixteenth century: art collecting. While today we take such
typical artistic formulas as commonplace, along with their frequent use
of identifying signatures (a Rothko, a Pollock), Peasant Scenes and Landscapes shows how these developed simultaneously in the commercial world of early modern Antwerp.


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