Matthias Grünewald was a German Renaissance painter of religious works who ignored Renaissance classicism to continue the style of late medieval Central European art into the 16th century.
His first name is also given as Mathis and his surname as Gothart or Neithardt. Only ten paintings—several consisting of many panels—and thirty-five drawings survive, all religious, although many others were lost at sea in the Baltic on their way to Sweden as war booty.
His present worldwide reputation, however, is based chiefly on his greatest masterpiece, the "Isenheim Altarpiece" c.1513-15, which was long believed to have been painted by Dürer. Grünewald grew up in Würzburg near Nuremberg, and from 1501-1521 he was proprietor of a workshop in Seligenstadt.
He traveled to Halle for commissions, and, although he was apparently a Protestant and a supporter of Martin Luther, he executed several commissions for two bishops of the Mainz diocese.
Grünewald's earliest datable work is the Mocking of Christ 1503; Alte Pinakothek, Munich, a colorful, vehemently expressive painting demonstrating his ability to create dazzling light effects. The painting depicts Christ blindfolded and being beaten by a band of grotesque men.
The figures are thick-bodied, soft, and fleshy, done in a manner suggestive of the Italian High Renaissance.
Elements of the work also show Grünewald's assimilation of Dürer, specifically his Apocalypse series. Different from High Renaissance idealism and humanism, however, are Grünewald's uses of figural distortion to portray violence and tragedy, thin fluttering drapery, highly contrasting areas of light and shadow, and unusually stark and iridescent color.
It is these elements, already in evidence in this early work, that Grünewald was to develop into the masterful, individualistic style most fully realized in his Isenheim Altarpiece.
The Isenheim Altarpiece was executed for the hospital chapel of Saint
Anthony's Monastery in Isenheim in Alsace and is now at the Unterlinden
Museum in Colmar, a nearby town. It is a carved shrine with two sets of
folding wings and three views.
The first, with the wings closed, is a
Crucifixion showing a harrowingly detailed, twisted, and bloody figure of
Christ on the cross in the center flanked, on the left, by the mourning
Madonna being comforted by John the Apostle, and Mary Magdelene kneeling
with hands clasped in prayer, and, on the right, by a standing John the
Baptist pointing to the dying Savior. At the feet of the Baptist is a lamb
holding a cross, symbol of the "Lamb of God" slaughtered for man's
sins.
The drama of the scene, symbolizing the divine and human natures of
Christ, is heightened by the stark contrast between the vibrantly lit
foreground and the dark sky and bleak landscape of low mountains in the
background.
When the outer wings are opened, three scenes of celebration
are revealed: the Annunciation, the Angel Concert for Madonna and Child,
and the Resurrection.
Grünewald's unsurpassed technique in painting
colored light is epitomized in the figure of the rising Christ; his
dramatic use of writhing forms in movement is also seen here in the
figures of Christ, the arriving angel, and the Madonna.
The Isenheim Altarpiece painted by the german artist Matthias Grünewald in 1506-1515