
Hieronymus Bosch
1450–1516 · Northern Low Countries · Early Netherlandish painting
The story
Bosch painted some of the strangest images in all of European art: bird-headed demons swallowing the damned, a man's torso built like a cracked eggshell, hell as a city burning at night. It is tempting to picture the mind behind them as an outsider or a heretic.
He was the opposite kind of man. He spent his whole life in one Dutch town, 's-Hertogenbosch, which gave him his name, and as far as any record shows he never left it. He was a respected local figure and a sworn member of the Brotherhood of Our Lady, a conservative religious confraternity of clergy and leading townsmen, for whom he painted altarpieces.
His monsters were meant as sermons. The Garden of Earthly Delights, from around 1500, reads left to right from the calm of Eden through a crowded garden of naked pleasure-seekers into that fiery hell, a warning about where earthly appetite leads, made for people who shared his faith. We know almost nothing else about him, not his training and barely a firm date, only the pictures and the town.
Works
34 works
Last JudgementHieronymus Bosch, 1500
The Temptation of Saint AnthonyHieronymus Bosch, 1500
Head of an old womanHieronymus Bosch, 1500
Visions of the Hereafter: Fall of the Damned into HellHieronymus Bosch, 1490
Visions of the Hereafter: HellHieronymus Bosch, 1490
Visions of the Hereafter: Terrestrial ParadiseHieronymus Bosch, 1500
Christ Child with a Walking FrameHieronymus Bosch, 1480
The Temptations of St. Anthony (Hieronymus Bosch, São Paulo)Hieronymus Bosch, 1500
Death of the ReprobateHieronymus Bosch, 1490