Saint John the Evangelist on Patmos - Hieronymus Bosch
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Description
Saint John the Evangelist on Patmos by Hieronymus Bosch shows the saint writing the Book of Revelation, with a vision of the Virgin Mary and a bizarre demon in a detailed landscape.
Hieronymus Bosch's painting, Saint John the Evangelist on Patmos, now held in the Gemäldegalerie, Berlin, presents a complex theological vision within a seemingly tranquil setting. Painted around 1489-1495, this oil on panel work depicts Saint John writing the Book of Revelation, his gaze directed towards an apparition of the Virgin Mary in the upper left corner. An angel stands behind him on the hill, while a bizarre demon lurks in the lower right. The painting's composition is divided into distinct zones. The foreground features the saint in contemplation, his figure draped in voluminous robes of pink and white. The middle ground presents a detailed, panoramic view of the landscape, complete with a townscape and waterways. The upper portion of the painting contains the celestial vision, set against a pale sky. Bosch's characteristic attention to detail is evident in the rendering of the landscape, the saint's garments, and the grotesque features of the demon. The demon, a hybrid creature with insect-like wings and armour, embodies the forces of evil that Saint John confronts in his apocalyptic vision. The overall effect is one of both serenity and unease, typical of Bosch's unique artistic style.
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Each print is produced to order using 12-colour giclée printing on FSC-certified archival paper. Designed in Britain and printed at your nearest production hub to reduce waste and speed up delivery.
Saint John the Evangelist on Patmos - Hieronymus Bosch
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Materials & Sizing
Museum-grade giclée on FSC-certified archival matte paper, with framed and canvas options.
- Paper sizes: A4, A3, A2, A1, A0 and B2 (50×70 cm)
- Canvas: XS (20×30 cm) to Large (60×90 cm)
- Frames: black, natural wood, dark wood or white
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Artist Biography
Hieronymus Bosch
When he was about thirteen, a fire destroyed 4,000 houses in the town. He almost certainly watched it. Scholars point to this event when explaining why flames appear so insistently in his later work, licking across panels of the damned and the disobedient, painted with a specificity that suggests memory rather than imagination.
He came from painters. His grandfather Jan van Aken had been one; four of Jan's five sons were painters too, though none of their work survives. Bosch married Aleyt Goyaerts van den Meervenne, a woman who was older than him and considerably wealthier. Her money meant he did not depend on commissions. He could paint what interested him, and what interested him was the full catalogue of human foolishness.
Only about 25 paintings are confidently attributed to him today. He signed just seven of them and dated none. The Garden of Earthly Delights, his best-known work, is a triptych tracing the arc from paradise to damnation, packed with hundreds of nude figures, hybrid creatures, and objects that resist easy interpretation. In 2014, someone noticed what appeared to be musical notes written on a tortured figure's backside in the hell panel. They transcribed and recorded the result. It sounds roughly as you would expect music from hell to sound.
His technique was unusual for the period. Where his Netherlandish contemporaries built up smooth, translucent glazes that concealed all brushwork, Bosch painted in thin, loose layers. The chalk underdrawing sometimes shows through. The effect is closer to drawing than to the polished surfaces of van Eyck or Memling.
He joined the Brotherhood of Our Lady in the late 1480s, a prestigious local confraternity with about 40 primary members and 7,000 associates across Europe. His father had served as their artistic adviser. The Brotherhood connected him to wealthy, orthodox Catholic patrons, and his paintings were collected across the Netherlands, Austria, and Spain during his lifetime. Philip II of Spain amassed so many that the Prado remains the richest repository of his work. The Surrealists claimed him centuries later. Leonora Carrington called him the first modern artist.
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