The Royal Institute for Cultural Heritage (KIK-IRPA) is honoured to announce The Ghent Altarpiece. Research and Conservation of the Interior: The Lower Register
Published in October 2021
Main Authors: G. Steyaert, M. Postec, J. Sanyova & H. Dubois
With observations, research and documents by:
Painting Conservators-Restorers: K. Froyen, N. Laquière, L. Mortiaux, F. Rosier, B. Devolder, C. de Boulard
Chemical Research Scientists: G. Van der Snickt, F. Mederos-Henry, C. Glaude, F. Vanmeert, S. De Meyer, S. Legrand, A. Coudray, S. Kuckova, K. Janssens
Specialists in Scientific Imagery and Photography: C. Currie, S. De Potter, K. Van Acker, C. Fondaire, S. Bazzo, H. Pigeolet
Royal Institute for Cultural Heritage, Contributions to the Study of the Flemish Primitives 17 Language: Engels, 210 pages. ISBN 978-2-930054-41-4. Price : 58 €.
Available at the KIK-IRPA’s reception desk and Brepols (The Ghent Altarpiece (brepols.net)).
Trailer: The Ghent Altarpiece: the precise contribution of Hubert and Jan van Eyck identified – YouTube
The Ghent Altarpiece by Hubert and Jan van Eyck has always attracted both admiration and curiosity. Following the treatment of the closed polyptych, we turned to the paintings of the lower register of the open altarpiece, which includes the famous Adoration of the Lamb. A major research and restoration campaign by the KIK-IRPA was carried out between 2016 and 2020. The findings reflect those from the treatment of the closed altarpiece: large areas of the panels were covered with overpaints, the vast majority dating from the 16th century. Their removal allows the Van Eyck brothers’ paintings to be truly appreciated again.
The three years that the conservators spent working on the panels enabled them to examine the paintings down to the smallest detail. Interdisciplinary collaboration with laboratory scientists, art historians and experts in scientific imagery led to a series of discoveries – some anticipated in light of earlier research, others completely unexpected. The authenticity of the quatrain stating that Hubert had begun the work, that his brother Jan completed it and that it was presented in 1432, has been firmly established by the KIK-IRPA in the previous volume on the Ghent Altarpiece (2020, The Ghent Altarpiece | KIK-IRPA (kikirpa.be)). In this second volume, new hypotheses are proposed here regarding the division of labour between the two Van Eyck brothers. The contribution of Hubert, who died in 1426, can finally be seen more clearly and turns out to be far from negligible. But the removal of overpaints has revealed non-Eyckian interventions, too.
Info: The Ghent Altarpiece | KIK-IRPA (kikirpa.be)
See also The Ghent Altarpiece. A Bibliography | KIK-IRPA (kikirpa.be) and The Ghent Altarpiece | KIK-IRPA (kikirpa.be)