LEUVEN.- The new exhibition Atelier Bouts introduces visitors to the science behind 15th-century painting techniques. Six iconic masterpieces from the studio of the Flemish Master Dieric Bouts are examined layer by layer. The exhibition is an intimate follow-up to the international retrospective DIERIC BOUTS. Creator of Images.
How did the Flemish Masters create their iconic paintings? And what materials did they use in the various layers? Was Bouts the sole mastermind behind the works that we attribute to his hand? And how should we restore these paintings some 500 years later? Atelier Bouts provides the scientific answers to all these questions.
Visitors can now see, in unprecedented detail, six of the most iconic works to have emerged from the studios of Dieric and Albrecht Bouts over five centuries ago. Thanks to state-of-the-art imaging techniques and new material-technical analysis, we know more about the works than ever before: including things that are invisible to the naked eye.
Right down to the sketch
The exhibition features six masterpieces by Bouts. That alone is exceptional. But for each of the individual paintings, we also explain a technique that has revealed new information about the work. Think of X-ray radiography, paint sample analysis, or infrared reflectography. This latter technology, for example, allows us to look through the paint layers, and to see all the way down to the underdrawing. You suddenly find yourself face to face with the painters first, rough sketch, says David Lainé, conservator and researcher at IPARC/ICM.
Thanks to dendrochronology, a scientific discipline that allows us to date wood, we know that Dieric Bouts could not have painted the Mater Dolorosa (after 1490). Yet it could well have been created in his son Albrechts workshop, David Lainé explains.
Marjan Debaene, senior curator of Old Masters at M Leuven, adds: At the end of the exhibition, The Martyrdom of Saint Hippolytus will return to St Salvators Cathedral in Bruges and the Triptych of the Descent from the Cross, a prestigious loan from Granada, will travel on to the Royal Institute for Cultural Heritage (KIK) for a major restoration campaign. The Last Supper and The Martyrdom of Saint Erasmus, two absolute masterpieces, will be returned to St Peters Church. This really is the last chance to see these four works by Bouts together in the same gallery.
In search of Bouts
To coincide with the exhibition, M is organising a lecture entitled Dieric Bouts, a prominent city painter and enigma on 21 March 2024. Dr Stephan Kemperdick, curator of the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin and one of the worlds foremost authorities on Flemish Masters, takes us on a journey in search of Bouts and invites us to enjoy a host of detours and meanderings. Registration essential.
Museum Leuven
February 16th, 2024 - April 28th, 2024