SAINT LOUIS, MO.- The Saint Louis Art Museum is presenting Beyond Bosch: The Afterlife of a Renaissance Master in Print, an exhibition exploring the significant role that prints inspired by Hieronymus Bosch played in establishing the Netherlandish master as a highly desirable brand in the growing print market of the 16th century. The free exhibition in Galleries 234 and 235 opened on April 17 and closes on July 19.
Bosch (c. 1450−1516) became an international phenomenon with his paintings of hellfire and hybrid monsters that captured the imaginations not only of his Renaissance patrons but also of generations of artists who came after him. Bosch lived and worked in the town of s-Hertogenbosch, but it was in the nearby metropolis of Antwerpat the time the epicenter of trade and culture in northern Europe, where prints inspired by the painter began appearing some 40 years after his death.
Bosch made no prints himself, but his contemporary Alart du Hameel did produce a handful of engravings directly inspired by Boschs model. By contrast, the later Boschian prints, which make up most of the exhibition, are not literal reproductions of known works by the artist. Instead they draw inspiration from Bosch's unique legacy of artistic invention.
Alongside the pioneering print entrepreneur Hieronymus Cock, the artist Pieter Bruegel the Elder, described as a second Bosch when he launched his career, was a critical figure in this story. Bruegels Big Fish Eat Little Fish, published by Cock, enigmatically carries Boschs name as its inventor rather than Bruegels. This engraving inaugurated the Boschian print phenomenon that continued into the 17th century, when The Tree -Man was made. This etching borrows the hybrid monster at the center from one of Boschs few surviving drawings, augmenting it with a cast of characters who gape at the creature from a safe distance.
Beyond Bosch draws almost exclusively from a private collection, with a small number of strategic loans. The exhibition tells the story of Bosch's afterlife in print, for the first time demonstrating how prints popularized Bosch, transforming his name into an international brand associated with everything from monstrous drolleries to moral dramas, and serving as a launching ground for many artists after him.
In conjunction with the exhibition, the Museum is presenting The Seven Deadly Sins, a video by contemporary Flemish artist Antoine Roegiers that is on view in an adjacent gallery. Taking inspiration from a series of drawings by Pieter Bruegel that were in turn inspired by Bosch, Roegiers painstakingly brings Bruegels drawings to life through the marvels of animation.
Beyond Bosch is co-curated by Marisa Bass, assistant professor of art history and archaeology at Washington University in Saint Louis, and Elizabeth Wyckoff, curator of prints, drawings, and photographs at the Saint Louis Art Museum.