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Is Black Death art based on plague art?
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May 18, 2020 · How have artists portrayed epidemics through history – and what can the art tell us about then and now? Emily Kasriel explores the art of plague from the Black Death to current times.
- Exploring Black Death Art
- Famous Bubonic Plague Paintings
- Frequently Asked Questions
Artists have frequently attempted to make sense of the unpredictable damage brought on by the Medieval Bubonic plague, creating Black Plague art as a means of expressing their sorrows. Their portrayal of the tragedies they observed has shifted dramatically over time, but the artists’ aim to depict the spirit of an epidemic has stayed consistent. Th...
During difficult circumstances, many creators and entertainers feel compelled to create. What, though, did artwork look like in the 14th century, when Europe was destroyed by the Black Death, and was this mirrored in Medieval art? In this next chapter, we will be looking at a few famous examples of Bubonic Plague paintings. These Black Plague art p...
Exactly What Effect Did the Black Plague have on Art?
The second plague outbreak, which occurred in the mid-14th century, had a tremendous impact on European culture, the concept of death, and theology. Many creative portrayals of this period depicted moments of horrific misery, satire, and at times – hope. This era was frequently defined by death and its numerous, ever-changing manifestations.
What Are the Specific Characteristics of Black Death Artwork?
The Black Death left an evident sense of misery and sadness in its wake. This sadness was expressed in a variety of cultural and creative forms. During that period, creative expression mirrored people’s personal experiences with death. The disease began swiftly decimating Europe’s population, with no apparent cause. People started believing that death from the plague was the consequence of God’s punishment and foreshadowed an eternity of misery since it was a time of intense religious belief...
- Alicia du Plessis
- ( Author And Art History Expert )
- Tournai Citizens Burying the Dead During the Black Death, 14th century. In the time of the Black Death (1347 to 1351) themes such as skeletons, death, and the Dance of Death were very common in culture and especially art.
- Giacomo Borlone de Burchis, The Triumph of Death with The Dance of Death, 15th century. The horror of the Black Death had another unexpected effect, very dark humor.
- Pieter Bruegel the Elder, Triumph of Death, c. 1562. We are not in the Middle Ages anymore but The Triumph of Death by Flemish Renaissance master Pieter Bruegel the Elder with a very deadly swing shows how the Black Death could look like in an average European town.
- Paulus Furst of Nuremberg, D octor Schnabel von Rom, 1656. The Black Death was more than a medieval horror, it kept coming back. For more than the next 300 years the plague became a regular part of everyday life in Europe.
- Zoe Mann
- Depicting the Dead. Get the latest articles delivered to your inbox. Sign up to our Free Weekly Newsletter. During the reign of the Black Death, victims were buried in mass burial pits and this work depicts a mass grave in the town of Tournai, Belgium.
- The ‘Dance of the Dead’ Motif. On a different note, the Danse Macabre, or Dance of the Dead, was a popular and entertaining motif of Medieval art. In this work by Giacomo Borlone de Burchis of Clusone, Italy, Burchis depicts people of all walks of life dancing with skeletons for the Queen of Death who stands at the top of the work holding two scrolls.
- Devils Sent to Kill. This manuscript was painted in the 14th century in Tuscany where almost half of their population succumbed to the disease. It is a tiny image from a page in the Medieval art manuscript, and is full of action and detail.
- Virgin Mary. There is no Medieval art without the appearance of the Virgin Mary or Madonna. Iconographies of the mother of Jesus Christ are found in churches and altars everywhere and truly define religious art.
Jan 31, 2023 · The Black Death, also known as the Black Plague or Medieval Bubonic Plague, played a significant role in shaping European history. It killed anywhere from 25 to 200 million people across Europe, starting somewhere between 1346 and 1348 and raging into the early 1350’s.
- ( Content Editor, Art Writer, Photographer )
The impact of the Black Death of 1348 (also called ‘the Great Pestilence’, ‘the Great Plague’, and ‘the Great Mortality’ in its own time) on medieval European culture continues to be investigated by social, economic, demographic, and medical historians.
Dec 27, 2018 · The plague outbreak from 1347 to 1352, known as the Black Death, resulted in the deaths of between one third and one half of all living Europeans, and around a third of those in the affected Middle East – estimated at over 50 million human lives.