The Museum Saint John’s Hospital and Hans Memling are inextricably connected. Nowhere in the world are so many works by Memling to be found in their original locations. Bruges is always worth a visit, and that should definitely include a peek inside the Museum Saint John’s Hospital.
Triptych of Saint John the Baptist and Saint John the Evangelist (1479) - Hans Memling
Memling’s Triptych of Saint John the Baptist and Saint John the Evangelist from 1479 is a monumental altarpiece made for the church of Saint John’s Hospital. The sisters and friars who managed the hospital are depicted as the patrons on the outside of the triptych: Antheunis Seghers, Jacob de Ceuninck, Agnes Casembrood and Clara van Hulsen. The altarpiece is dedicated to the patron saints of the hospital Saint John the Baptist with the lamb and Saint John the Evangelist with the chalice. They also determined the depiction and composition of the triptych when it was opened. A striking detail in the centre panel is the wooden crane to lift wine barrels off the ship. The tolls to be paid for this were charged by the hospital.
Triptych of the Adoration of the Magi (1479) - Hans Memling
This triptych was commissioned from Hans Memling in 1479 by Jan Floreins, also known as Van der Rijst. He had entered the community of friars at the hospital around 1471 and would stay until he died in 1504. Between 1488 and 1497, he was even appointed as master. On the centre panel of the triptych, he is depicted kneeling in his black habit behind the wall. The triptych shows three crucial events in Christ's youth: His birth, the Adoration of the Magi and His Presentation at the Temple. The level of care in this smaller work betrays Memling’s urge to prove himself: wooden beams, brick buildings, carefully positioned figures, a street view with a city gate, men on horseback and a black man with a turban riding a dromedary... The signature and date on the frame are rare for Memling.
The Lamentation of Christ (1480) - Hans Memling
On the left, we recognise a kneeling Adriaen Reins, friar at Saint John’s Hospital and the patron who commissioned the work from Hans Memling in 1480. We know this because the latter dated the triptych and painted Reins’s initials on the frame. Mary, Saint John the Evangelist and Mary Magdalene lament Christ’s lifeless body. Quite literally, as we see the tears rolling down their cheeks from their red eyes. A disconsolate John is lifting the crown of thorns off Jesus’s head. The centre of the painting depicts the body of Christ lying in the lap of His apostle and mother. The right panel shows us Saint Barbara. And the outside depicts two more women saints: Saint Uncumber (Saint Wilgefortis) on the left and Saint Mary of Egypt on the right.
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