free hosting   image hosting   hosting reseller   online album   e-shop   famous people 
Free Website Templates
Free Installer

Powandas Directory 07
Page 06

After the Powandas moments everything else pales.

Powandas

Powandas Home

Powandas Sitemap

Powandas Dir 01

Powandas Dir 02

Powandas Dir 03

Powandas Dir 04

Powandas Dir 05

Powandas Dir 06

Powandas Dir 07

Powandas Dir 08

Powandas Dir 09

Powandas Dir 10

Powandas Directory 07
Page 06

Living at the same time with these half-Italianized painters, and continuing later in the century, there was another group of painters in the Low Countries who were emphatically of the soil, believing in themselves and their own country and picturing scenes from commonplace life in a manner quite their own. These were the "Little Masters," the _genre_ painters, of whom there was even a stronger representation appearing contemporaneously in Holland. In Belgium there were not so many nor such talented men, but some of them were very interesting in their work as in their subjects. Teniers the Younger (1610-1690) was among the first of them to picture peasant, burgher, alewife, and nobleman in all scenes and places. Nothing escaped him as a subject, and yet his best work was shown in the handling of low life in taverns. There is coarse wit in his work, but it is atoned for by good color and easy handling. He was influenced by Rubens, though decidedly different from him in many respects. Brouwer (1606?-1638) has often been catalogued with the Holland school, but he really belongs with Teniers, in Belgium. He died early, but left a number of pictures remarkable for their fine "fat" quality and their beautiful color. He was not a man of Italian imagination, but a painter of low life, with coarse humor and not too much good taste, yet a superb technician and vastly beyond many of his little Dutch contemporaries at the North. Teniers and Brouwer led a school and had many followers.

The countries which Caesar went to invade were occupied by various nations and tribes, many of which were well organized and war-like, and some of them were considerably civilized and wealthy. They had extended tracts of cultivated land, the slopes of the hills and the mountain sides being formed into green pasturages, which were covered with flocks of goats, and sheep, and herds of cattle, while the smoother and more level tracts were adorned with smiling vineyards and broadly-extended fields of waving grain. They had cities, forts, ships, and armies. Their manners and customs would be considered somewhat rude by modern nations, and some of their usages of war were half barbarian. For example, in one of the nations which Caesar encountered, he found, as he says in his narrative, a corps of cavalry, as a constituent part of the army, in which, to every horse, there were _two_ men, one the rider, and the other a sort of foot soldier and attendant. If the battle went against them, and the squadron were put to their speed in a retreat, these footmen would cling to the manes-of the horses, and then, half running, half flying, they would be borne along over the field, thus keeping always at the side of their comrades, and escaping with them to a place of safety.


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


This page is Copyright © Powandas and all rights are reserved. Please don't copy without proper authorization. References to other Web sites are not endorsements. Powandas makes no guarantees or promises concerning the quality or content of other sites Powandas provides any links to. Powandas only links for informational purposes and does not convey or confer any sort of endorsement through its links.