Free Web Hosting Provider - Web Hosting - E-commerce - High Speed Internet - Free Web Page
Search the Web

Beaming Directory 09
Page 03

The best Beaming days are more productive.

Beaming

Beaming Home

Beaming Sitemap

Beaming Dir 01

Beaming Dir 02

Beaming Dir 03

Beaming Dir 04

Beaming Dir 05

Beaming Dir 06

Beaming Dir 07

Beaming Dir 08

Beaming Dir 09

Beaming Dir 10

Beaming Directory 09
Page 03

This school probably got its sentimental inclination, shown in slight forms and tender expression, from France, but derived much of its technic from the Netherlands. Stephen Lochner, or Meister Stephen, (fl. 1450) leaned toward the Flemish methods, and in his celebrated picture, the Madonna of the Rose Garden, in the Cologne Museum, there is an indication of this; but there is also an individuality showing the growth of German independence in painting. The figures of his Dombild have little manliness or power, but considerable grace, pathos, and religious feeling. They are not abstract types but the spiritualized people of the country in native costumes, with much gold, jewelry, and armor. Gold was used instead of a landscape background, and the foreground was spattered with flowers and leaves. The outlines are rather hard, and none of the aerial perspective of the Flemings is given. After a time French sentiment was still further encroached upon by Flemish realism, as shown in the works of the Master of the Lyversberg Passion (fl. about 1463-1480), to be seen in the Cologne Museum.

s if fames were the relics of seditions past; but they are no less, indeed, the preludes of seditions to come. Howsoever he noteth it right, that seditious tumults, and seditious fames, differ no more but as brother and sister, masculine and feminine; especially if it come to that, that the best actions of a state, and the most plausible, and which ought to give greatest contentment, are taken in ill sense, and traduced: for that shows the envy great, as Tacitus saith; conflata magna invidia, seu bene seu male gesta premunt. Neither doth it follow, that because these fames are a sign of troubles, that the suppressing of them with too much severity, should be a remedy of troubles. For the despising of them, many times checks them best; and the going about to stop them, doth but make a wonder long-lived. Also that kind of obedience, which Tacitus speaketh of, is to be held suspected: Erant in officio, sed tamen qui mallent mandata imperantium interpretari quam exequi; disputing, excusing, cavilling upon mandates and directions, is a kind of shaking off the yoke, and assay of disobedience; especially if in those disputings, they which are for the direction, speak fearfully and tenderly, and those that are against it, audaciously.


[ Sec 09 Page 01 ] [ Sec 09 Page 02 ] [ Sec 09 Page 03 ] [ Sec 09 Page 04 ] [ Sec 09 Page 05 ]
[ Sec 09 Page 06 ] [ Sec 09 Page 07 ] [ Sec 09 Page 08 ] [ Sec 09 Page 09 ] [ Sec 09 Page 10 ]


This page is Copyright © Beaming and all rights are reserved. Please don't copy without proper authorization. References to other Web sites are not endorsements. Beaming makes no promises about the quality or content of other sites that are linked to.