The 25 surviving panels by the so-called “Devil’s Painter,” late Medieval artist Hieronymus Bosch, belong to some of the biggest museums in the world — the Louvre in Paris, the Prado in Madrid, the ...
The Tree Man, c. 1500–1510. Hieronymus Bosch (Netherlandish, 1440–1516). Pen and light and dark brown ink on paper; 27.7 x 21.1 cm. Albertina, Vienna, inv. 7876 ...
MADRID – Hieronymus Bosch may have died 500 years ago, but he’s inspired episodes of ‘The Simpsons,’ rock ‘n’ roll lyrics, children’s books and movies. How does an artist, dead for half a millennium, ...
The J. Paul Getty Trust, whose grant-making wing has been the catalyst for the ongoing Pacific Standard Time series of region-wide, multi-exhibition looks at art in Southern California, dialed back ...
Hieronymus Bosch, “The Temptation of St. Anthony” (fragment) (c. 1500–10) at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art (photo by Rik Klein Gotink; image processing by Robert G. Erdmann for the Bosch Research ...
More than 400,000 people visited the exhibition of Hieronymus Bosch’s paintings at the Noordbrabants Museum during its three-month run. The figure of 421,700 is a record for the museum in Bosch’s home ...
A painting at the Nelson-Atkins Museum in Kansas City, Missouri, has been identified as the handiwork of Dutch master Hieronymus Bosch. The 1500-1510 work, titled The Temptation of St. Anthony, is now ...
Hieronymus Bosch is that rare artist in any medium with his own adjective. Even people who’ve never been in an art museum know that “Boschian” means strange, grotesque, even apocalyptic. It derives ...
Imaginary animals dance across the panels of artist Hieronymus Bosch's paintings: There are snails with human legs, fish with human arms and at least one spider-legged peacock. Since his death in 1516 ...
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