
Jan Brueghel the Elder / Joos de Momper the Younger · PD
Una granja
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La historia
This broad view of the Flemish countryside was a two-man job, the kind of teamwork that made Antwerp's workshops so productive around 1620. Joos de Momper laid in the sweeping landscape, and Jan Brueghel the Elder added the small, precise figures, peasants hauling, herding, and working the fields. Brueghel came by those figures honestly. His father was Pieter Bruegel the Elder, famous for scenes that tied farm labour to the turning months of the year, and the son kept that vocabulary alive. Look for the everyday detail scattered across the fields rather than any single hero. The nickname Brueghel earned, Velvet, came from exactly this touch, the soft, jewel-like finish he gave to figures barely a finger high.




