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(Huyghz.) Lucas van Leyden

(b Leiden, c. 1494; d Leiden, 1533). North Netherlandish printmaker, draughtsman and painter, son of HUGO JACOBSZ. He was the first Dutch artist to establish an international reputation for himself as an engraver while he was still alive. His prolific output as a printmaker

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Biography: Lucas van Leyden

The Dutch engraver and painter Lucas van Leyden (1494-1533) was the leading graphic artist in the Netherlands in the early 16th century.

Because Lucas van Leyden showed such a highly developed graphic talent in engravings dated 1508, his birth date has been thought by some to be as early as 1489. Generally, however, scholarly opinion has accepted Karel van Mander's statement (1604) that Lucas was born in Leyden (Leiden) in 1494. His father, Hughe Jacobsz, was his first teacher, followed by the mannerist painter Cornelis Engelbrechtsz. In 1515 Lucas was married in Leyden, where he worked all his life. In 1521 he traveled to Antwerp. There he met Albrecht Dürer, whose works provided the most important artistic influence on his graphic oeuvre.

Lucas's engraving Mohammed and the Monk Sergius (1508) confirms Van Mander's story of his precocity. His technical mastery and compositional skill at this early age presuppose considerable training and experience as well as a formidable natural talent. It is not unlikely that, as Van Mander says, Lucas had learned his craft in the shops of a specialist in inlaying metal in weapons and of a goldsmith.

Graphic Works

Much of Lucas's large production of engravings and woodcuts and a few etchings bear dates, from 1508 to 1530, so that it is possible to follow his development and to establish a probable chronology for his paintings, only five of which are dated.

In 1510 Lucas produced several masterpieces of engraving, including the large Ecce Homo and the Return of the Prodigal Son, both of which impressed Rembrandt more than a century later. Lucas's Triumph of Mordecai (1515) was the basis for a painting by Rembrandt's teacher, Pieter Lastman. Lucas's close observation of nature, delight in landscape, and grotesque physiognomies were in the Dutch tradition. His best works are the early ones, in which these features predominate. Later he was so overawed by the achievements of Dürer and by the prints of the Italian engraver Marcantonio Raimondi that he attempted to emulate them at the expense of his personal bent.

Lucas was commissioned to make woodcuts to illustrate a number of books. A series of seven large woodcuts, Pernicious Women (ca. 1513), show his power in this medium, which he used for admirable independent subjects as well as sets. His graphic works dealt mainly with religious subject matter. A few were genre subjects, such as the engraving The Dentist (1523), which pointed out a moral in an ironic way, a form of art that became very popular in Holland in the 17th century.

His Paintings

We know of no painting that can with certainty be identified as a youthful work by Lucas. The most likely candidate is a small Adoration of the Magi. Certainly awkward enough to be early is the Beheading of John the Baptist, which is thought to date from about 1512, in which the belated Gothic flavor of Engelbrechtsz is sharply reflected.

Lucas's portraits have a forthright quality that is characteristically Dutch. This sense of unsparing veracity can be seen in his painted Self-portrait (ca. 1508) and in the chalk drawing Portrait of a Young Man (1521).

The Last Judgment triptych, which was commissioned in 1526, is Lucas's masterpiece. Groups of nude figures realized in a broad, painterly style are arranged in a field of vast depth that depends for its sense of distance mainly on aerial perspective. Moses Striking Water from the Rock (1527) is confused in composition, but it displays very well Lucas's genre-like way of treating a religious theme. The Worship of the Golden Calf triptych is a better-composed work of his maturity in which his natural bent for genre and for a Northern specificity of detail tends to submerge the Old Testament subject. In the foreground families that represent all the ages of man eat, drink, quarrel, and cuddle, and in the far distance one can descry with difficulty the Golden Calf, which is the ostensible occasion for the celebration.

Lucas was a transitional figure rather than a major innovator, despite his exceptional gifts. He appreciated Renaissance developments but failed in his efforts to adapt them in his native idiom.

Further Reading

A detailed study is F. W. H. Hollstein, The Graphic Art of Lucas van Leyden (Amsterdam, 1955). Reproductions of all the graphic works are provided in Jacques Lavalleye, Pieter Bruegel the Elder and Lucas van Leyden: The Complete Engravings, Etchings, and Woodcuts (1967). On the paintings, see Max J. Friedländer, Early Netherlandish Painting (trans., 5 vols., 1967-1969).

Additional Sources

Vos, Rik., Lucas van Leyden, Bentveld: Landshoff; Maarssen: G. Schwartz, 1978.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Lucas van Leyden
('käs vän lī'dən) , 1494–1533, Dutch historical and genre painter and engraver. With Lucas, Dutch painting of scenes from daily life may be said to begin. His art is notable for its realistic treatment, dramatic power, and careful execution. He studied with his father, Huig Jacobsz, a Leiden artist, and with Cornelis Engelbrechtsz and soon established himself as an engraver of extraordinary ability, as well as a painter of originality and power. A child prodigy and prolific artist, Lucas executed more than 200 engravings, etchings, and designs for woodcuts, including Mohammed and the Monk (1508), Ecce Homo (1510), and Adam and Eve (1519). From c.1510 his works show the influence of Dürer, whom he met on a visit to Antwerp in 1521. They drew and exchanged portraits of each other. Later Lucas's style reflected his study of the prints of Marcantonio Raimondi. Among his paintings are Moses Striking Water from the Rock (Mus. of Fine Arts, Boston); Chess Game, St. Jerome, and Virgin Enthroned (Berlin); and Last Judgment (Leiden).

Bibliography

See his complete engravings, etchings, and woodcuts, ed. by J. Lavalleye (tr. 1967).

 
Wikipedia: Lucas van Leyden
Lucus van Leyden

Lucas van Leyden (Leiden, 1494August 8 1533 in Leiden), also named either Lucas Hugensz or Lucas Jacobsz, was a Dutch engraver and painter, born and mainly active in Leiden, who was among the first Dutch exponents of genre painting and is generally regarded as one of the finest engravers in the history of art. He was the pupil of his father, from whose hand no works are known, and of Cornelis Engelbrechtsz, but both of these were painters whereas Lucas himself was principally an engraver. Where he learnt engraving is unknown, but he was highly skilled in that art at a very early age: the earliest known print by him (Mohammed and the Murdered Monk) dates from 1508, when he was perhaps only 14, yet reveals no trace of immaturity in inspiration or technique.

Lot and his daughters (ca. 1509)
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Lot and his daughters (ca. 1509)

In 1514 he entered the Painters' Guild at Leiden. He seems to have travelled a certain amount, and visits are recorded to Antwerp in 1521, the year of Dürer's Netherlandish journey, and to Middelburg in 1527, when he met Jan Mabuse. An unbroken series of dated engravings makes it possible to follow his career as a print-maker and to date many of his paintings, but no clear pattern of stylistic development emerges. Dürer was the single greatest influence on him, but Lucas was less intellectual in his approach, tending to concentrate on the anecdotal features of the subject and to take delight in caricatures and genre motifs. Carel van Mander characterizes Lucas as a pleasure-loving dilettante, who sometimes worked in bed, but he left a large oeuvre, in spite of his fairly early death, and must have been a prodigious worker.

Lucas had a great reputation in his day (Vasari even rated him above Dürer) and is universally regarded as one of the greatest figures in the history of graphic art (he made etchings and woodcuts as well as engravings and was a prolific draughtsman). His status as a painter is less elevated, but he was undoubtedly one of the outstanding Netherlandish painters of his period. He was a pioneer of the Netherlandish genre tradition, as witness his Chess Players (Gemäldegalerie, Berlin) which actually represents a variant game called 'courier' - and his Card Players (National Gallery of Art, Washington), while his celebrated Last Judgement triptych (Lakenhal Museum, Leiden, 1526-27) shows the heights to which he could rise as a religious painter. It eloquently displays his vivid imaginative powers, his marvellous skill as a colourist and his deft and fluid brushwork.

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Art Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Art. Copyright © 2002 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Lucas van Leyden" Read more

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