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Inspired Through Art: The Ghent Altarpiece by Jan van Eyck, 1432

To view a digital version of the artwork click here.

The Ghent Altarpiece, also known by the title The Adoration of the Mystic Lamb, is one of the most famous images in art history. The additional title is important as a signal to the viewer to pay close attention to where the image leads us through an evocation of the narrative of salvation.

Jan van Eyck was born in the fourteenth century in present-day Belgium and settled in the city of Bruges, where he accomplished his major works during the Northern Renaissance. He and his artist brother Hubert began this altarpiece together in the 1420s, but an inscription on the original frame notes that it was finished by the “second best artist,” that being Jan van Eyck. Jan, however, was no minor artist. In fact, he was the towering figure in the painting world of the Early Northern Renaissance, with this altarpiece for St. Bavo’s Cathedral in Ghent, Belgium included among his many impressive works.

The altarpiece is a polyptych—a set of individual painted panels, framed and hinged together so as to be foldable and able to be reconfigured. When the wings are closed, different images can be seen, including a painting of the Annunciation. The view we see here is a typical configuration, showing major elements with rich significance. It is also important to note that the richness extends to the medium of the paint. While previous generations used egg tempera or water-based fresco, van Eyck was an early innovator of oil as a medium, which imparts a depth of color and luminosity not found in tempera or fresco. It would take decades before oil was adopted by the painters of the Italian Renaissance, and today oil still reigns as queen of all painting media.

The sections of the altarpiece can be understood as an outside-of-time, typological concert of figures and scenes set into two registers or rows of panels, upper and lower. If we begin with the presence of downcast Adam and Eve, we can recognize the Fall of our first parents. Their presence here marks the beginning of the narrative of salvation. We also understand that Jesus is the new Adam who accomplishes our salvation. This joins Adam and Jesus in a typological relationship—a once-perfect man causes our downfall; a divine man restores us. Just above Adam and Eve, we notice small narratives from Genesis: the sacrifices of brothers Abel and Cain and the murder of Abel by Cain. Both of these events typologically prefigure Jesus in the Paschal Mystery as the perfect sacrifice and the innocent victim.

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Linus Meldrum is Assistant Professor of Fine Arts at Franciscan University where he teaches the core curriculum course, Visual Arts and the Catholic Imagination, as well as Studio Art.

Professor Meldrum earned his BFA in Painting at Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana in 1981 and his MFA in Painting and Printmaking at The Yale School of Art in New Haven, Connecticut in 1983, and has been an independent artist and craftsman for over 30 years. He is a veteran of more than 400 exhibitions and festivals throughout the Mid-Atlantic States. Teaching assignments have included Painting and Drawing courses at The Yale School of Art, Central Connecticut State University and the Pennsylvania School of Art & Design.

Professor
Meldrum earned his BFA in Painting at Indiana University in
Bloomington, Indiana in 1981 and his MFA in Painting and Printmaking at
The Yale School of Art in New Haven, Connecticut in 1983, and has been
an independent artist and craftsman for over 30 years. He is a veteran
of more than 400 exhibitions and festivals throughout the Mid-Atlantic
States. Teaching assignments have included Painting and Drawing courses
at The Yale School of Art, Central Connecticut State University and the
Pennsylvania School of Art & Design. - See more at:
http://www.franciscan.edu/faculty/meldrum-linus/#sthash.TuIMz3dA.dpuf

This article is from The Catechetical Review (Online Edition ISSN 2379-6324) and may be copied for catechetical purposes only. It may not be reprinted in another published work without the permission of The Catechetical Review by contacting [email protected]

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