Biology:The Fall of the Rebel Angels (Bruegel)

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Short description: Painting by Pieter Bruegel the Elder
The Fall of the Rebel Angels
Pieter Bruegel the Elder - The Fall of the Rebel Angels - RMFAB 584 (derivative work).jpg
ArtistPieter Bruegel the Elder
Year1562[1]
TypeOil on panel
Dimensions117 cm × 162 cm (46 in × 64 in)
LocationRoyal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium, Brussels

The Fall of the Rebel Angels is an oil-on-panel art piece painted in 1562 by the Netherlandish Renaissance artist, Pieter Bruegel the Elder. The painting is 117cm x 162cm (46 inches by 64 inches) and is currently held in the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium in Brussels. The Fall of Rebel Angels depicts Lucifer along with the other fallen angels that have been banished from heaven. Angels are falling from the sun in a stacked manner along with ungodly creatures that Bruegel created.[2] This piece by Bruegel was previously thought to be a Hieronymus Bosch piece. Bruegel was influenced by a variety of artists such as Albrecht Dürer, Frans Floris I, and Hieronymus Bosch. He also got ideas for the creation of his creatures in his previous works, The Last Judgement and Mad Meg (Dulle Griet)'.[3]

Description

Painted in 1562, Bruegel's depiction of this subject of Lucifer falling with his fallen angels is taken from a passage from Revelation 12, and reveals the artist's profound debt to Hieronymus Bosch. This is shown through the grotesque, ugly or distorted, figures painted as half-human and half-apocalyptic creatures.[4]

Lucifer was designed to be a perfect angel. He fell from heaven because of his pride and rebellion against God's divine plan, which was to appoint Jesus as the people's savior.[5] Lucifer coerced one-third of the angels to follow his lead in the rebellion and to assist in appointing him to be the new "God."[5] The sin of pride caused the fall of Lucifer and his companions and resulted in the "war in heaven." The archangel Michael was given the duty to drive Lucifer and the fallen angels out of heaven.[5] The conflict of good and evil as well as vice and virtue are constant recurring themes throughout Bruegel's work.[6]

The composition with a central figure placed among many smaller figures was favored by Bruegel during this time. This is not only shown through The Fall of Rebel Angels but through art pieces such as Dulle Griet and in the series of engravings of the Vices and the Virtues completed for the Antwerp publisher Hieronymus Cock. [7]

The painting is a split landscape with the top portion being heaven and the bottom portion representing hell. Heaven is illustrated with light blues, vibrant colors, and surrounded by flying angels, while hell is much darker than heaven. This is illustrated through dark tones and demonic creatures to set the distinct difference between the two. The entire space is filled and little absent space is present.  

Figures

There are many figures painted in this work of art. The central figure is the archangel Michael depicted with a sword. He is in triumph as he defeats the fallen angels and demonic creatures.[2] Above the archangel, there are figures coming out of what looks like a hole in the sky which is the sun.[3] The figures represent Lucifer, the fallen angels, and demonic creatures. There are also an abundance of exotic animals alongside deformed and mutated figures. There are two other prominent figures on either side of archangel Michael who are dressed in all white to contrast the dark colors underneath them.[3] These figures are good angels who are assisting in the fight against the rebellious angels. In the upper portion in both corners, there are angelic musicians playing their instruments as if the war between good and evil has already been played out. The action of playing the trumpets foreshadow a successful triumph.[2]

Attribution Debate

Due to not finding a signature on the painting, the Royal Museum of Fine Arts first inherited the painting with the idea that the artist of the painting was Hieronymus Bosch. The signature was found under the frame in 1900 with the name of Pieter Bruegel on it. With this finding, they assumed the painting came from Pieter the Younger.[4] Later, after finding a date on the painting, it was clarified that the artist was not Pieter the Younger but Pieter Bruegel the Elder.[2]

Influences

The Last Judgement by Hieronymus Bosch

thumb|The Garden of Earthly Delights by Hieronymus Bosch|left

Saint Michael Fighting the Dragon by Albrecht Dürer

Bruegel had multiple inspirations for the creation of The Fall of Rebel Angels, including Albrecht Dürer, Frans Floris I, Hieronymus Bosch and past works of Bruegel himself. Dürer's woodcut series of the Apocalypse, specifically Saint Michael Fighting the Dragon, is theorized to provide an insight on the position of the archangel Michael as a central figure standing on the dragon with a sword to the body of the dragon.[3] Frans Floris I has created his own Fall of Rebel Angels consisting of monster heads on human nude bodies which called for a comparison between his and Bruegel's work.[4] Bruegel made his own images with the same monstrous component of different heads on different figures.[3] Hieronymus Bosch was the main influencer to Bruegel's work. Bosch's The Garden of Earthly Delights triptych portrays hybrid creatures and explored the idea of vices and virtues as well as good vs evil.[3] The hybrid creatures are depicted on the far right side of the triptych with the hellish dark scenery. Bosch's The Last Judgement has also influenced Bruegel's work.[4] On the far left part of the triptych, Bosch has his version of the fallen rebel angels falling from the sky. Bruegel enlarges the scene and has the subject of the fallen angels as his main focus.[4] Ultimately, Bruegel was known as a "second Bosch" or an "imitator" of Bosch because of the similar techniques and concepts they used.[3] Both Bosch and Bruegel first sketched with a brush, then applied a thin layer of pigment, and later continued to add layers.[4] Their techniques were so similar that in many cases, it was hard to differentiate who painted a piece.[4] The rivalry of Bosch and Bruegel was evident, especially when Bruegel entered competitions in Antwerp against Bosch.[4] The drawing done by Bruegel in 1558 of The Last Judgement was the source for the angelic musicians in The Fall of Rebel Angels.[3] The angel figures with the trumpets in this painting are thought to be siblings to the angels in the drawing.[3] The Mad Meg(Dulle Griet) by Bruegel was created in the same year with the same concept of distorted hellish figures.[3] Towards the bottom there is a fish with a human leg coming out of it which is similar to the figure with a human head on an animals body in The Fall of Rebel Angels.[3]

Interpretation

There has been a comparison between this art work and cabinets of curiosities. Because this painting is so full and depicted with natural and artificial objects, Tine Luk Meganck states this is Bruegel's own cabinet of curiosity portrayed as an art piece.[2] Bruegel utilizes natural objects such as a butterfly, fish, and other known creatures. He also uses artificial objects such as the instruments, armor, and weapons. The incorporation of both natural and artificial objects reflect his stance on how he feels about the new found foreign land of the Americas.[2]

In popular culture

A reproduction of the painting appears at the beginning of the music video for the Korean version of the song Blood Sweat & Tears by South Korea group BTS. As the group somewhat cheerfully walks through a museum, member Jin stops in front of the painting and observes it briefly with a more serious demeanor, at which point the song begins. [8]

The painting was also featured in a collaboration between Supreme and Undercover, a Japanese clothing brand by Jun Takahashi. The collection released during the Fall/Winter 2016 season and featured the painting on an all-over-print jacket and a sticker. [9]

Gallery

Notes

References

“Bible Gateway Passage: Revelation 12 - New International Version.” Bible Gateway.

Koerner, Joseph Leo. Bosch and Bruegel from Enemy Painting to Everyday Life. 57. Vol. 57. Princeton, Washington: Princeton University Press, 2016.

Kosloski, Phillip. "Why Did Satan Rebel Against God?". Aleteia.

Meganck, Tine Luk. Pieter Bruegel the Elder. Fall of Rebel Angels. Art, Knowledge, and Politics on the Eve of the Dutch Revolt. Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium, 2014.

Orenstein, Nadine. Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen. Pieter Bruegel the Elder: Drawings and Prints. New York : New Haven: Metropolitan Museum of Art; Yale University Press, 2001.

Seidel, Max, Roger H. Marijnissen, Pieter Bruegel, and Max Seidel. Bruegel. Stuttgart: Belser, 1969.

Stechow, Wolfgang. Pieter Bruegel the Elder. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1990.


External links