24 December: open from 10.00 to 15.00. 25 December: museum closed. 

Jan de Beer was a painter active in the first third of the 16th century, associated with the group known as the Antwerp Mannerists. The work of these artists is characterised by the use of minute detail in the backgrounds and by the poses of the figures, resulting in a style that combined late Gothic and Renaissance elements. These two paintings must have been part of a larger ensemble depicting episodes from the life of the Virgin. The first panel depicts The Birth of the Virgin, an episode not narrated in the Gospels. We see Saint Anne in bed, praying, with the infant Virgin in the arms of one of the midwives whose anatomical proportions are highly elongated, like the rest of the figures. The room is filled with objects treated in the manner of independent, still-life elements, such as the metal pitcher and the basket, both of which appear in the foreground of each panel. The Annunciation has a markedly narrative sense, with the Virgin’s sewing implements abandoned on the floor on the Archangel’s arrival and the inclusion of the episode of The Visitation, visible through the window. In both paintings the objects in the rooms are particularly striking elements in the compositions, for example, the vase of lilies in the centre of The Annunciation.

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16th Century16th Century - Netherlandish paintingPaintingOilpanel
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