Memento Bosch Essay

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Hieronymus Bosch was a painter who lived during the Northern Renaissance. He was born circa 1450 CE and died circa 1516 CE. The artist was born in the town of Hertogenbosch that was the capital of the Dutch province of Brabant where bosch Bosch took his name from. He was a member of the Brotherhood of Our Lady, which was a religious group that was spread all over Europe. Many members of his family were painters. Historians believe that either his uncles or his father taught him how to paint. There is little that historians know about bosch’s life and training. Bosch signed very few of his paintings and rarely ever dated them.
His art depicted very pessimistic views and had a meaning of being sent straight to hell for indulging in sinful pleasures. …show more content…

The black death had consumed over a third of the whole population of europe. The style focused on reminding the public that death was inevitable for everyone and that it was always waiting for you. The style also focussed on religious ideas and designs, symbolising that death was a part of the universal order of things. Death was a large part of life during the black death and in times after.The style was used to make people think of death in the terms of Christian salvation in the afterlife. The most common motifs used in the memento mori style are corpses, protesting mortals, frogs, toads, worms, snakes, demons, and dancing skeletons. The idea of individuality and having an immortal soul after death emerged as …show more content…

1400-1600 CE, that had a very distinctive style. The northern renaissance had a very different focus than the Italian renaissance. Rather than focussing on realism, naturalism, and making the paintings look like they are not man-made, Bosch focussed on the religious aspect and he used a more surreal style to convey his ideas. The painters of this time tried to make the paintings seem like they were not man made. The dutch painters at this time were starting to experiment with having landscapes be that main focus of the pieces and not having any figures in the pieces. As well they were starting to focus on more realistic pieces, but they were also going towards naturalism. The pieces started to show glimpses of the everyday world and started moving away from the gothic decorative elements that were used in previous

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