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Topic: Hell (Bosch)


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 WORLD HISTORY OF ART: Surreal Scatology: The Work of Hieronymous Bosch
Indeed, the dark, phantasmagoric world of Bosch demands nearly an inexhaustible list of adjectives with which to properly describe it: surreal, grotesque, mad, ghoulish, baffling, hilarious, fantastical, republican, riotous, gothic, noxious, democratic, visionary, and so on.
Hell, despite being a flaming cesspool in itself, is not without its rules; for instance, note the poor sinner who is forced to vomit in the "porcelain goddess" underneath the bird monster's latrine.
However, the “hell panel” of the triptych is also populated by a wide array of idiosyncratic and ambiguous symbols and figures.
worldhistoryofart.blogspot.com /2004/12/surreal-scatology-work-of-hieronymous.html

  
 WebMuseum: Bosch, Hieronymus
At the time of his death, Bosch was internationally celebrated as an eccentric painter of religious visions who dealt in particular with the torments of hell.
During his lifetime Bosch's works were in the inventories of noble families of the Netherlands, Austria, and Spain, and they were imitated in a number of paintings and prints throughout the 16th century, especially in the works of Pieter Bruegel the Elder.
Bosch was a member of the religious Brotherhood of Our Lady, for whom he painted several altarpieces for the Cathedral of Saint John's, Hertogenbosch, all of which are now lost.
www.ibiblio.org /wm/paint/auth/bosch   (722 words)

  
 Hieronymus Bosch
Bosch was widely known as an onconventional painter whose visions of religiousity were fixated on the tortures of hell.
Bosch certainly was quite grim, obsessed with death, that he so often and so well presented the sufferings of others.
Bosch painted a number of altarpieces for the Cathedral of Saint John's, Hertogenbosch, all of which are now lost.
www.masters-gallery.com /03_Artists/artists/bosch   (722 words)

  
 ArtandCulture Artist: Hieronymus Bosch
Hell, another favorite topic of the times, was depicted by Bosch in his "Last Judgment" (1506-08) as a devilish, gigantic kitchen that features huge, sharp knives transformed into machines of torture.
Bosch freely reinterpreted secular and religious motifs with unbridled creativity, not so much exploring the world of the subconscious, but rather reveling in every thematic variation, allusion, and symbol available to him -- causing him to be labeled a heretic by later generations.
Any understanding of Bosch requires grounding oneself in his world: Europe at the end of the fifteenth century was a complex web of superstitions, heresies, mystic pronouncements, itinerant preachers, and religious brotherhoods.
www.artandculture.com /cgi-bin/WebObjects/ACLive.woa/wa/artist?id=907   (595 words)

  
 Morbid Outlook - Hieronymus Bosch
Hieronymus Bosch, a Netherlandish painter is known for his fantastic, remarkable creatures and visual interpretations of hell, death, sin and folly.
Bosch was born around 1450 (the exact date is unknown) in the duchy of Brabant, which was then under the Duke of Burgundy.
Bosch was a man ahead of his time; the time frame in which he created his masterpieces that these sins, follies and stupidities occurred could very well be our own.
www.morbidoutlook.com /art/articles/1999_00_bosch.html   (1060 words)

  
 WebMuseum: Bosch, Hieronymus
At the time of his death, Bosch was internationally celebrated as an eccentric painter of religious visions who dealt in particular with the torments of hell.
During his lifetime Bosch's works were in the inventories of noble families of the Netherlands, Austria, and Spain, and they were imitated in a number of paintings and prints throughout the 16th century, especially in the works of Pieter Bruegel the Elder.
Bosch was a member of the religious Brotherhood of Our Lady, for whom he painted several altarpieces for the Cathedral of Saint John's, Hertogenbosch, all of which are now lost.
www.ibiblio.org /wm/paint/auth/bosch   (722 words)

  
 Hieronymus Bosch
Bosch was widely known as an onconventional painter whose visions of religiousity were fixated on the tortures of hell.
Bosch certainly was quite grim, obsessed with death, that he so often and so well presented the sufferings of others.
Bosch painted a number of altarpieces for the Cathedral of Saint John's, Hertogenbosch, all of which are now lost.
www.masters-gallery.com /03_Artists/artists/bosch   (342 words)

  
 WebMuseum: Bosch, Hieronymus
At the time of his death, Bosch was internationally celebrated as an eccentric painter of religious visions who dealt in particular with the torments of hell.
During his lifetime Bosch's works were in the inventories of noble families of the Netherlands, Austria, and Spain, and they were imitated in a number of paintings and prints throughout the 16th century, especially in the works of Pieter Bruegel the Elder.
Bosch was a member of the religious Brotherhood of Our Lady, for whom he painted several altarpieces for the Cathedral of Saint John's, Hertogenbosch, all of which are now lost.
www.ibiblio.org /wm/paint/auth/bosch   (722 words)

  
 WebMuseum: Bosch, Hieronymus
At the time of his death, Bosch was internationally celebrated as an eccentric painter of religious visions who dealt in particular with the torments of hell.
During his lifetime Bosch's works were in the inventories of noble families of the Netherlands, Austria, and Spain, and they were imitated in a number of paintings and prints throughout the 16th century, especially in the works of Pieter Bruegel the Elder.
Bosch was a member of the religious Brotherhood of Our Lady, for whom he painted several altarpieces for the Cathedral of Saint John's, Hertogenbosch, all of which are now lost.
www.ibiblio.org /wm/paint/auth/bosch   (722 words)

  
 WebMuseum: Bosch, Hieronymus
At the time of his death, Bosch was internationally celebrated as an eccentric painter of religious visions who dealt in particular with the torments of hell.
During his lifetime Bosch's works were in the inventories of noble families of the Netherlands, Austria, and Spain, and they were imitated in a number of paintings and prints throughout the 16th century, especially in the works of Pieter Bruegel the Elder.
Bosch was a member of the religious Brotherhood of Our Lady, for whom he painted several altarpieces for the Cathedral of Saint John's, Hertogenbosch, all of which are now lost.
www.library.vstu.edu.ru /gallery/Bosch/Bosch.htm   (722 words)

  
 Bosch 1 Cross-View
Scholars differ in their interpretation of Bosch's art, but most agree that his pictures show a preoccupation with the human propensity for sin in defiance of God, as well as with God's eternal damnation of lost souls in hell as a fateful consequence of human folly.
Bosch was responsible for designing a stained-glass window, among several other works, for the town church.
The documents about Bosch indicate that he followed the predictable life of a prominent Roman Catholic artist in 's Hertogenbosch, a provincial but prosperous town located in the modern Netherlands close to the Belgian border.
www.mcs.csuhayward.edu /~malek/Illusions/2cross-view/Vieux/Bosch/Bosch1cv.html   (393 words)

  
 bosch_eng4.htm
DEVIL ON NIGHT-CHAIR It is presumed that somehow Bosch had knowledge of the Visio Tungdali, a twelfth century handwriting that describes a vision of a journey through hell.
Bosch must have subsequently wondered whether, looking at the right panel, this was such a smart idea.
Maybe we will never know what Bosch ‘had between his ears’ when he was painting this picture.
www.3d-mouseion.com /engels/bosch_eng4.htm   (459 words)

  
 CGFA- Bio: Hieronymus Bosch
Scholars differ in their interpretation of Bosch's art, but most agree that his pictures show a preoccupation with the human propensity for sin in defiance of God, as well as with God's eternal damnation of lost souls in hell as a fateful consequence of human folly.
Bosch was responsible for designing a stained-glass window, among several other works, for the town church.
Hieronymus Bosch is known for his enigmatic panels illustrating complex religious subjects with fantastic, often demonic imagery.
cgfa.dotsrc.org /bosch/bosch_bio.htm   (351 words)

  
 Hieronymous Bosch posters and prints
Hieronymus Bosch is internationally celebrated as painter of religious visions who dealt in particular with the torments of hell.
During his lifetime Bosch's works were in the inventories of noble families of the Netherlands Austria and Spain and they were imitated in a many paintings and prints throughout the 16th century especially in the works of Pieter Bruegel the Elder.
Whilst Flemish painters created a world of serenity and reality the world of Bosch is one of horror and imagination.
www.urbanposters.com /cat~nid~154~sa~c.htm   (139 words)

  
 bosch_eng4.htm
DEVIL ON NIGHT-CHAIR It is presumed that somehow Bosch had knowledge of the Visio Tungdali, a twelfth century handwriting that describes a vision of a journey through hell.
Bosch must have subsequently wondered whether, looking at the right panel, this was such a smart idea.
Maybe we will never know what Bosch ‘had between his ears’ when he was painting this picture.
www.3d-mouseion.com /engels/bosch_eng4.htm   (392 words)

  
 Hieronymous Bosch
Through Bosch's paintings of heaven and hell on earth, there is a universality created.
Bosch was a Dutch painter who concentrated on religious themes, and formulated scenes of saints and the holy family, the likes of which none had seen before.
For example, Bosch is well known for his frequent use of randomly placed demon engines in his compositions.
athena.english.vt.edu /~maclaugh/bosch.htm   (240 words)

  
 The Triumph of Death
Also known as Jerome Bosch, this Dutch painter is known for his detailed, fantastic, often demonic imagery depicting the torments of Hell.
Hieronymus Bosch was born circa 1450 and died August 1516.
The Artchive does not have a biography of Bosch but it does have links (no thumbnails) to works by Bosch.
world.std.com /~raparker/exploring/thewasteland/exbruegl.html   (240 words)

  
 janzalon.txt
In Bosch's great triptych masterpiece, The Garden of Delights (Madrid, The Prado) scenes of edenic beauty stand side by side with the teeming suffering of "The Musician's Hell" from which these selections have been taken.
Bosch combines the frightening strangeness of his stagings with the utter conviction of the dreamer that the vision must be real, can't be real.
The presence of hybrid creatures, the topos of the world turned upside down, the looming sense of a brutal awakening are among Bosch's favorite devices in his fantastic visions.
www.skidmore.edu /academics/fll/janzalon/janzalon.txt   (240 words)

  
 Hieronymus Bosch - Blender Artists Forums
Bosch has always been one of my favorite painters, and i once reproduced a section of his piece tryptych, representing heaven, hell, and purgatory.
It's the afterimage to the original picture "The temptation of the holy Antonius" from Hieronymus Bosch.
Also, I would suggest adding sculptural lighting to the painted in characters, which is to say, simply make their masses lighter toward the center, and darker toward the edges.
blenderartists.org /forum/showthread?t=19693   (138 words)

  
 Untitled Document
Perhaps the most famous visionary artist was the fifteenth-century painter Hieronymous Bosch, who portrayed an extraordinary array of grotesque beings, tortured souls in hell, and angels guiding the saved to the light of heaven.
While enveloped by a fiery inner light, she was told to "speak and write not according to human speech or human inventiveness, but to the extent that you see and hear those things in the heavens above in the marvelousness of God." The icons created from her visions are direct and authentic gifts of spirit.
His Garden of Delights is one of the strangest paintings in the world – an encyclopedia of metamorphic plant/animal/human symbolism.
www.lovestarrecords.com /dreampeace/erial/profile/What_is_Visionary.html   (1506 words)

  
 Amazon.ca: Extreme Heist (Full Screen): DVD
Though, the most Johnny Bosch says is "hell," but others say worse.
In an effort to create careers after playing the popular Power Rangers on TV and in videos, Johnny Yong Bosch and Jason Narvy, guided by Rangers former director Koichi Sakamoto, managed to develop this breezy feature that showcases their acting skills, martial arts prowess, and directing chops.
Johnny and Jason did a great job, though it was very different from their acting on the PR series, that's probably what they were going for...
www.amazon.ca /exec/obidos/ASIN/B00005V4XY   (737 words)

  
 Hieronymous Bosch
"If God is a snail, Bosch's depictions of Hell
www.geocities.com /sgbstorage/bosch.html   (47 words)

  
 Soccerpages Forum - Promotion/relegation play-offs
I am not sure what the rules are: if it's goal-difference that counts, FC Zwolle is almost sure to stay in and Helmond will need a hell of a lot of goals (right now, Zwolle has 7-3, Helmond has 6-6).
FC Zwolle, the team defending its Eredivisie slot, won the eastern regional 'grudge game' against regional rivals Go Ahead Eagles by 2-1, thanks to a very dubious (read: ridiculous) penalty in the 87th minute.
Even better news: FC Volendam (the team the whole of Amsterdam is rooting for...) won its first three games straight and seems to be headed for the Eredivisie.
www.soccerpages.com /forum/showthread.php?threadid=10925   (1546 words)

  
 deathart.html
In the case of depictions of hell, particularly in the Northern Renaissance (Grunewald, Bosch), the dead are represented as grotesque and fantastic.
An often overlooked dimension of the full story of Christ's death is the so-called Harrowing of Hell.
." According to oral tradition (not scripture), Christ spent these three days rescuing the righteous, mostly old testament patriarchs, from hell.
www.faculty.de.gcsu.edu /~rviau/deathart.html   (378 words)

  
 Wendy Carlos, TH+H Notes
While composing Tales of Heaven and Hell I experienced a momentary "flash" of recognition, and remembered several Bosch paintings I'd not seen in several years, as somehow related to my new album.
Admittedly, Tales of Heaven and Hell is not the sort of music you put on and actively listen to; its seems best suited to a low-level ambient playback, wherein its subversion qualities (hollow ringings, disembodied voices, unidentifiable vocalizations, etc.) can work their scary way into your awareness through the back door.
For younger listeners weaned on three-minute pop ditties, the intriguing Tales of Heaven and Hell will be challenging listening, but in the end there is much to discover from it.
www.wendycarlos.com /+thh.html   (378 words)

  
 Links:Library: Herkimer County Community College
WebMuseum: Hieronymus Bosch - Bosch was universally famous as an extraordinary painter of religious perceptions who practiced especially with the agony of hell.
Hieronymus Bosch - Hieronymus Bosch created to the greatest extent some of the most fabricated imaginary paintings that ever existed.
A Web Page Dedicated To Hieronymus Bosch - A page devoted to the Dutch painter Hieronymus Bosch as well as the greatest creative fictional paintings ever produced by this man. Bosch's possesive and incubus perceptions are displayed here.
www.hccc.suny.edu /hccclibrary/links.htm   (1543 words)

  
 ► hieronymous
Artistic Influences: Hieronymous Bosch and Hell On Earth J im Morrison was highly influenced by the artistry of Hieronymous Bosch.
Hieronymous, Bosch, bosch, Cosimo, Allegory, allegory, allegorical, painting, art, Dutch, dutch, surreal, surrealism, Surrealism, jpg, gallery, Gallery, Virtual, virtual, hypertext, Deleuze, deleuze...
Hieronymous Bosch Oil Paintings, Hieronymous Bosch Biography, Hieronymous Bosch Gallery Oil Paintings, Oil Paintings Reproductions, Hieronymous Bosch Oil Paintings, Hieronymous Bosch Biography...
www.mycriteria.com /links/hieronymous   (1543 words)

  
 Amazon.ca: Video: O Lucky Man!
When I first bought and viewed "O Lucky Man", I tried to piece the whole thing together and thought: "What in holy hell is this?" After the third viewing, I decided to stop trying to make sense of it all, and just take the contents at face value.
And it is here that we often find the most engaging bits of Bosch's work where so much happens in an instant as viewing a painting, which, actually takes years to see it all.
Everytime I see pictures of the flemish painter Heironymous Bosch and then see Lindsey Anderson in this movie I think, gee he looks just like Bosch; kinda makes movies like Bosch paints as well.
www.amazon.ca /exec/obidos/ASIN/6300269701   (1502 words)

  
 "THE TABLE OF THE SEVEN DEADLY SINS"
The four corners of the panel are occupied by four smaller circles in which Bosch has painted the Four Last Things: Death, Judgement, Hell and Glory.
The Four Last Things are conventional images: the most complex is that of Hell in which we again find the Seven Deadly Sins with their accompanying punishments.
This wheel of sins is united by the shared sky and by views of the Dutch countryside.
museoprado.mcu.es /icuadro_mayo_2003.html   (401 words)

  
 International Fine Print Dealers Association (IFPDA)
He was known as an eccentric painter of religious visions, particularly of the torments of hell.
Bosch most likely never traveled far from his home, although records exist that suggest a commission in 1504 from Philip the Handsome, who was later the King of Castile.
Born in 1450, Bosch spent his entire artistic career in the small Dutch town of Hertogenbosch.
www.printdealers.com /artist_template.cfm?id=163   (106 words)

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