The Master Of Grossgmain
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( 1480 -  1499 ) -  Artworks
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Artworks in Arcadja
1
Some works of The Master Of Grossgmain
Extracted between 1 works in the catalog of Arcadja
The Master Of Grossgmain - The Virgin Of The Immaculate Conception With Saint Mark And Saint Sebastian
Original
Auction:
Christie's -
Dec 8, 2005- London
Lot number:
35
Other WORKS AT AUCTIONDescription:
The Master of Grossgmain (active Salzburg c. 1480-1499)
The Virgin of the Immaculate Conception with Saint Mark and Saint
Sebastian
on gold ground panel
45½ x 29 1/8 in. (115.5 x 74 cm.)
with a German School, early 16th century, Virgin of Mercy, on gold
ground panel, the panel being the separated reverse face of the
above (fig. 1)
two (2)
Pre-Lot Text
THE PROPERTY FROM A EUROPEAN COLLECTION (LOT 35)
Provenance
(Presumably) August Ferdinand, Graf Breuner-Enckevoirth
(1796-1877), Schloss Grafenegg, Niederösterreich, Austria, and by
descent.
Literature
M. Dvorák, Österreichische Kunsttopographie. Beiheft zum Band I.
Schloss Grafenegg, Vienna, 1908, pp. 20 and 39-40, nos. 7-8, pls. V
and VII, (the first) 'sehr charakteristisches Bild der Salzburger
Schule, dem Meister R.F. nahestehend.'
Lot Notes
The artist is named from four wing panels (1499; Grossgmain, nr.
Salzburg, Church of the Assumption of the Virgin) of a dismantled
Altarpiece of the Virgin and two very tall panels depicting the
Virgin and Child and Christ Salvator Mundi perhaps produced in
conjunction with them. The close stylistic connection of those
panels with the work of Rueland Frueauf I was noted early on and
the Master's as-yet anonymous appellation superseded an earlier,
incorrect attribution to Bartholomäus Zeitblom. Ludwig von Baldass
was the first to compile a list of the Master's known works (Conrad
Laib und die beiden Rueland Frueauf, Vienna, 1946, pp. 71-3, nos.
73 and 110-27), although the present panel was at the time unknown
and remains until now unpublished as a work by the Master.
In the 1908 survey of Schloss Grafenegg, written as part of a
commission for the Zentral-Kommission für Kunst- und Historische
Denkmale, its close proximity to the work of Frueauf (then known as
the Master R.F.) was correctly noted, as the Master of Grossgmain
is now widely regarded as the 'dominant personality in a workshop
that must probably be seen as an extension or a branch of the
Frueauf workshop' (O. Demus, 'Zu den Tafeln des Grossgmainer
Altars', Österreichische Zeitschrift für Kunst und Denkmalpflege,
xix, 1965, pp. 43-5, figs. 34-9). Certainly, the common use of the
same punch for the decoration of the backgrounds of paintings
confirms a direct link with Frueauf (for which, see E.-M.
Zimmermann, Studien zur Frueauf-Problem (Rueland Frueauf der Ältere
und der Meister der Grossgmain), phil. diss., Vienna, 1975). Other
works attributed to the Master include the Virgin Enthroned with
Saint Thomas and Donors of 1483, the Coronation of the Virgin (both
in the Prague, National Museum), a Saint Augustine and Saint
Ambrose, perhaps from the predella of the Grossgmain Altar (both
Vienna, Belvedere) and an Education of Christ (Boston, Museum of
Fine Arts).
We are grateful to Ludwig Meyer for the attribution and for his
assistance with this lot; he notes that the painting must
originally have been part of an altarpiece, of which it was
presumably the central panel with two wings, likely depicting
saints. He dates the painting to circa 1480-85, relatively early in
the Master's known oeuvre, and compares the dominant salmon-red,
black and white palette, as well as stylistic elements, including
the flowing drapery and the depiction of the eyes, with other known
paintings by the Master. Particularly interesting for a similar
depiction of the subject by the Master is the Virgin of the
Immaculate Conception in the Augustiner-Chorherrenstift,
Klosterneuburg (see the catalogue of the exhibition, Spätgotik in
Salzburg. Die Malerei. 1400-1530, Salzburg, 1972, p. 128, no. 107,
fig. 46b).
Scientific analysis of the supports have confirmed that they were
originally the front and reverse of the same panel, and that they
must at some point in the past have been split. The painting on the
reverse, depicting The Virgin of Mercy, seems, however to be by a
separate hand that Ludwig Meyer suggests may date from the
generation after the Master of Grossgmain, possibly active in
Munich.