We learned about this guy in art history. He was so ahead of his time, so all,you surreal and fantasy art lovers should read up on Hieronymus Bosch and his art. What a boss.Some of the bizarre details in: The Garden of Earthly Delights (1490-1510), Hieronymus Bosch. Oil-on-wood triptych, 220 x 389 cm, Museo del Prado.
The source/meaning of many of the beings and images portrayed by Bosch are rather obscure and rarely seen in the paintings of his contemporaries. Many believe that Bosch was a reclusive madman who conceived of such beings himself, while others, including myself, are of the opinion that Bosch merely applied to painting figures that for the age were common-place in other media, but not painting, and that we have lost most of the sources which might have inspired Bosch’s beings (The study of demonology), although there might be a few that we are aware of. One such supposed inspiration was the St. John’s Cathedral in ‘s-Hertogenbosch, Bosch’s home town (and after which he took his name), specifically the gargoyles and figures adorning its buttresses. Something else that Bosch might have drawn inspiration from is marginalia from manuscripts-small doodles done on the margins of pages, as such.
(via youradimondimaheart)
one of my favorite alter pieces! it opens to three compartments. Heaven, Earth and Hell and it’s all about the...
We learned about this guy in art history. He was so ahead of his time, so all,you surreal and fantasy art lovers should...
I’ve actually seen this piece in a book my high school art teacher had.