Charity after the Flood

This essay reconsiders the panels in the Rijksmuseum’s collection depicting the St Elizabeth’s Flood of 1421. When they were removed from the church, the panels – once the outsides of the two wings of an altarpiece – were taken out of their original context, and the subsequent separation of the pan...

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Main Author: Hanneke van Asperen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Rijksmuseum Publications Department 2019-03-01
Series:The Rijksmuseum Bulletin
Online Access:https://bulletin.rijksmuseum.nl/article/view/9712
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spelling doaj-f5c5a7596d3d4f35b7424bc689028d952021-08-18T13:51:20ZengThe Rijksmuseum Publications DepartmentThe Rijksmuseum Bulletin1877-81272772-61262019-03-0167110.52476/trb.9712Charity after the FloodHanneke van Asperen This essay reconsiders the panels in the Rijksmuseum’s collection depicting the St Elizabeth’s Flood of 1421. When they were removed from the church, the panels – once the outsides of the two wings of an altarpiece – were taken out of their original context, and the subsequent separation of the panels’ obverse and reverse further obscured the original arrangement. The image itself provides important clues to its meaning with visual references to images of the Deluge, Christ’s Passion and Last Judgement. Most importantly, the flood panels should be studied in close relation to the life of St Elizabeth of Hungary, once depicted on the inside of the wings. Painted several decades after the flood, the panels do not render the catastrophe realistically. Instead, the image focuses on charity after the flood disaster when Dordrecht gave shelter to the victims and so followed the virtuous example of St Elizabeth. As an image of Dordrecht’s charity, the flood panels perfectly fit the religious context of the Grote Kerk for which they were once designed. https://bulletin.rijksmuseum.nl/article/view/9712
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hanneke van Asperen
spellingShingle Hanneke van Asperen
Charity after the Flood
The Rijksmuseum Bulletin
author_facet Hanneke van Asperen
author_sort Hanneke van Asperen
title Charity after the Flood
title_short Charity after the Flood
title_full Charity after the Flood
title_fullStr Charity after the Flood
title_full_unstemmed Charity after the Flood
title_sort charity after the flood
publisher The Rijksmuseum Publications Department
series The Rijksmuseum Bulletin
issn 1877-8127
2772-6126
publishDate 2019-03-01
description This essay reconsiders the panels in the Rijksmuseum’s collection depicting the St Elizabeth’s Flood of 1421. When they were removed from the church, the panels – once the outsides of the two wings of an altarpiece – were taken out of their original context, and the subsequent separation of the panels’ obverse and reverse further obscured the original arrangement. The image itself provides important clues to its meaning with visual references to images of the Deluge, Christ’s Passion and Last Judgement. Most importantly, the flood panels should be studied in close relation to the life of St Elizabeth of Hungary, once depicted on the inside of the wings. Painted several decades after the flood, the panels do not render the catastrophe realistically. Instead, the image focuses on charity after the flood disaster when Dordrecht gave shelter to the victims and so followed the virtuous example of St Elizabeth. As an image of Dordrecht’s charity, the flood panels perfectly fit the religious context of the Grote Kerk for which they were once designed.
url https://bulletin.rijksmuseum.nl/article/view/9712
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