31 December: open from 10.00 to 15.00. 1 January: museum closed. 

Bruyn lived and worked in Cologne. His work reveals a knowledge of Netherlandish art. Bruyn primarily focused on religious painting but was also highly successful as a portraitist, a genre in which his approach comes closer to that of contemporaries such as Joos van Cleve or Maerten van Heemskerck, particularly with regard to the use of realism.

Forming a pair, these two panels of almost identical size depict two half-length figures that turn towards each other slightly. They share the same blue background with a marble ledge and lighting that enters from the left. All these characteristics have led to the suggestion that the two sitters are a man and wife, while the coat-of-arms on the man’s ring, bearing a black trefoil, identifies him as a member of the Weinsberg family. Bruyn’s virtuoso technique is still more evident in the figure of the woman, particularly in the details of the jewels and accessories and in the magnificent foreshortening of the hand that holds the pinks. The woman is also more strongly lit and is defined through more pronounced contrasts of light and shade. The man, who has been inconclusively identified as various members of the house of Weinsberg, is depicted using a more muted light but is powerfully characterised and has a notably realistic face.

MGA

16th Century16th Century - Germanic paintingPaintingOilpanel
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