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PORTUGUESE ART
The 15th century saw the
commencement of Portuguese painting. In 1428, Jan
van Eyck came to Portugal for the marriage of King
John I's daughter Isabella to Philip the Good, Duke
of Burgundy. It was the beginning of a long and
close relationship with Flanders, which greatly
influenced Portuguese painting. From the Flemish,
Portuguese artists acquired not only the skills
of technique and composition, but also two traditions
of painting which were to grow in importance: religious
painting and portraiture. These two trends are clearly
apparent in the masterpiece of Portuguese 15th-century
art, namely the panels of the Adoration of St Vincent
by Nuno Gonçalves, on display in Lisbon's Ancient
Art Museum. He was appointed court painter to King
Afonso V in 1450 and painted the panels between
1458 and 1464.
A school of painting called
the Northern School was established around the height
of Manueline architecture in the 16th century. A
notable painter of this style, which employed naturalism
and detailed background landscapes, was Vasco Fernandes,
also known as 'Grão Vasco'. Around the same time
there was another group known as the Lisbon School,
which produced several top-grade painters, including
Jorge Afonso, Cristovão de Figueiredo, Garcio Fernandes
and Gregório Lopes, one of the best-known artists
of the late 16th century. One of the most acclaimed
painters in Portuguese history was Amadeo de Souza
Cardoso (1887-1918), some of whose works can be
seen in the northern town of Amarante.
Portuguese sculpture has
also grown in importance over the last 500 years.
During the first part of the 16th century, the leading
Renaissance sculptors in Portugal were immigrant
French masters, working mainly in marble and alabaster.
The most famous 18th century Portuguese sculptor
is Joaquim Machado de Castro (1731-1822), who came
from Coimbra, where the city's principal museum
is named after him. He was trained by José de Almeida
and worked under the Italian sculptor Alessandri
Giusti (1715-99), who set up a school in Mafra.
Machado de Castro's reputation is based on his splendid
bronze equestrian statue of Dom José, with attendant
figures, which he executed for Praça do Comércio
in Lisbon. Worthy examples of Portuguese Neo-classical
sculpture can be seen at the royal palaces at Queluz
and Ajuda, on the outskirts of the capital. Ajuda
Palace was the main centre of Portuguese artistic,
architectural and decorative activity during the
first quarter of the 19th century.
Carved woodwork, principally
in church interiors, was one of the most popular
and widespread of all forms of artistic expression
throughout the Iberian Peninsular from the 15th
to the end of the 18th century. Late Gothic woodcarving
is well represented in Coimbra's Sé Velha cathedral,
while the reliquary chapel in the monastery of Alcabaça
exemplifies the early Baroque style. Named after
King João V, who reigned in Portugal from 1706-50,
the Joanine style of carved woodwork best depicted
by the retables of the high altars of Oporto and
Viseu cathedrals, and splendid examples of late
Baroque and Rococo reredoses are to be seen at Tibães
(1757-60) and Falperra (1763), both near Braga in
Northern Portugal. Patterned tiles called azulejos
have been used in numerous ways in Portugal, on
the façades of both the smallest and largest buildings,
often with a staggering richness of colour and complexity.
In fact, the entire insides of many churches are
covered with beautifully painted azulejo glazed
tiles. The word azulejo comes from the Arabic azuleich,
and the art seems to have originated among the Assyrians
in the times before Jesus Christ. The Persians subsequently
adopted the technique before teaching it to the
Arabs, who brought it to Europe through the Moors.
They founded a factory in Seville where the first
tiles were made in geometric patterns. During the
17th century, Portugal adopted its own style of
tile painting after 60 sixty years of Spanish rule.reg\'f3rio
Lopes, one of the best-known artists of the late
16th century.\par
One of the most acclaimed painters in Portuguese
history was Amadeo de Souza Cardoso (1887-1918),
some of whose works can be seen in the northern
town of Amarante. |
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