Thesis title: Jan Borreman and Sculptural Practice in the Burgundian Netherlands c. 1479-1520
Supervised by
Funded by
- Mrs Charles Wrightsman Scholarship
- Friends of the Courtauld Scholarship
- Beatrice Del Favero Scholarship
- Guilford Foundation Scholarship
- Mrs Jane Wrightsman Scholarship
Netherlandish sculptor Jan Borreman, active in the Burgundian Netherlands c. 1479-1520, carved major devotional sculpture for churches throughout Europe for an elite and diverse patronage. Based in Brussels, Borreman and his workshop produced a wide range of objectsâwooden models for bronze casting, large-scale crucifixions and saints, and complex monumental retablesâfor the dukes of Burgundy, illustrious militia-civic groups, and patrons outside the Burgundian Netherlands. His distinctively expressive manner of carving combined virtuosity with intricate detail, matching that of the greatest Netherlandish painters and making the Borreman âbrandâ of carving influential among his contemporaries, who called him âdie beste meester beeldesnijder,â âthe best master sculptor.â
Seen in context of comparison with his contemporaries in quality, influence on other artists, patronage and wide geographic appeal, Borreman is a sculptor of considerable importance. Yet the same practices which made him a sought-after sculptor and brought him renown in his timeâspecialised production in collaboration with other artistsâhave obscured his impact on 15th c. art and today he is primarily known, mainly to specialists, for a single signed and dated work, the masterly Martyrdom of St George retable. Wartime destruction of archives and displacement of works from their original settings, difficulties of attribution, and various other factors have also contributed to his relative scholarly neglect.
Through a case study of Jan Borremanâs career, this dissertation examines late 15th c. sculptural practice in the Burgundian Netherlands, defining it broadly to encompass not only the woodcarverâs work with mallet and chisel, but also the social networks in which he functioned, and the literary, political, and religious activities which were inextricably intertwined with the business of sculpting. Alert to the historiographies of Borreman, Belgium, and the wider field of sculpture, the project considers issues of collaborative artistic production in Borremanâs models for metalwork; social networks, politics, war and devotion in the Martyrdom of St George retable; and the international appeal of Brussels woodcarving through works made for export outside of the Burgundian Netherlands.
Education
Courtauld Institute of Art
- PhD candidate, 2012-present (expected 2023)
- MA History of Art, 2010-2011: Commemoration, Salvation and Splendour: Artistic Production and Patronage in France and the Burgundian Netherlands, c.Ìę1380-1520,Ìęwith Professor Susie Nash (Distinction). Dissertation: ââ¶ÄCome, come and be crownedâ: The enamel triptych and French royalty, c. 1498-1538â (Distinction)
Sweet Briar College
- BA, 1996-2000: double-major cum laude in History of Art and in Spanish. Kathryn Haw Prize in Art History
Research interests
- Northern Renaissance art
- Woodcarving, stone carving and bronze casting
- Collaborative process among artists
- Depictions of tools and materials
- Artist signatures and self-representation
- Models for sculpture
Recent Publications
- ‘”,â with Jessica Barker and Graeme McArthur, The Burlington Magazine, , pp. 997-1009
- â,â National Gallery of Art blog, 22 May 2020
- âBorman and Bronze. Carving for Casting,â inÌęÌę(Brepols/ Harvey Miller 2019), pp. 170-177
- â,â inÌę, December 2017, no. 76, XXXIX, pp. 181-204
- Catalogue entries on woodcarving, tapestry, alabaster, and metalwork, inÌęHighlights from the National Gallery of Art, 2016
- â,â inÌęBronze, Boxwood, and Ivory in the Robert H. Smith Collection of Renaissance Sculpture.ÌęÌęA Second Supplement to the Catalogue Volume âArt of the Renaissance BronzeÌę1500-1650,âÌęwith Eike D. Schmidt et al., pp. 38-41,ÌęThe Burlington Magazine, November 2015
- âArtistic Exchange in Renaissance Europe,â inÌę, Courtauld Institute of Art Teachersâ Resource, 2013
- âAntico: Related Works in the Permanent Collectionâ guide, National Gallery of Art, 2011
- Catalogue entries on 16th c. French enamel and Italian sculpture in exhibition catalogueÌęPregio e Bellezza: Cammei e intagli dei MediciÌę(Palazzo Pitti), 2010
- âSculpture in One Hourâ guide, National Gallery of Art, 2010
Conferences & Lectures
- â,âÌęGothic SpiritÌęexhibitionÌę, âRestoring the Past: Destruction, Restoration and Preservation of Medieval Art and Architecture,â Luhring Augustine in association with Sam Fogg, 25 January 2020
- âNew Technical Research on the Tomb of Mary of Burgundy,âÌę, M â Museum Leuven, 27 November 2019
- âSculpture and Supplication: The Clay Tablet and the Cleveland Carthusians,â exhibition study day,ÌęThe Charterhouse of Bruges: Jan van Eyck, Petrus Christus, and Jan Vos, The Frick Collection, 17 December 2018
- â,â with Dylan Smith, National Gallery of Art,Ìę12 February 2018
- âFacture and Image: the tomb effigy of the Black Prince,â with Jessica Barker and Graeme McArthur, Courtauld Institute of Art Research Forum, 11 January 2018
- âAn art historical and scientific analysis of the tomb effigy of the Black Prince in Canterbury Cathedral,â with Jessica Barker and Graeme McArthur, Canterbury Cathedral,Ìę (a brief of our research)
- âCarving for Casting: Jan Borremanâs Wooden Models for Bronze,â Annual Third Year Postgraduate Symposium, Courtauld Institute of Art, 9 June 2017
- âCut, Carve, Cast, Clean: Jan Borremanâs Wooden Models for Bronze Sculpture,â National Gallery of Art, 31 October 2016
- âDays of destruction: Leuven,â National Gallery of Art, 31 July 2016
- âMeanwhile in the North⊠Jan Borremanâs wooden models for bronze sculpture,â Renaissance Society of America conference, Boston, 31 March 2016
- âThis is that sweet rose⊠Art and authority at Fontevrault,â Sweet Briar College, 30 April 2015
- ââ¶ÄTo die for an ideal:â Three wars, one retable, and the foundations of a Belgian history of art,â Religion, Art and Conflict conference, Courtauld Institute of Art, 6 December 2014
- âCrossbows, Clerics and Dead Duchesses. The Netherlandish Woodcarving of Jan Borreman, c.Ìę1479-1520,â inaugural lecture, Tower Villas Sculpture Talks, Arlington, 17 September 2014
- âJan Bormanâs compass: Artistic identity and the rhetoric of skill in early Netherlandish sculpture,â Oxford Medieval Graduate Conference on âSkill,â Ioannou Centre, 4 April 2013
- âJan Borman, Rogier van der Weyden, and the Crossbowmen of Leuven,â Lille-Leuven-London Conference, Park Abbey, 18 March 2013
- âArt for the Abbey: Louise de Bourbon and Female Authority at Fontevrault,â Feminist Art History Conference, American University, 10 November 2012
Teaching
- âThe Tomb of Mary of Burgundy,â guest speaker for Dr Douglas Brineâs undergraduate course on âArt, Gender, and Patronage at the Court of Burgundy,â Trinity University, San Antonio, 20 April 2021
- âThe Tomb of Mary of Burgundy,â guest lecturer for Professor Susie Nashâs graduate Northern Renaissance Workshop, Courtauld Institute of Art, 8 March 2021
- ‘Have a Closer Look: No one has seen this since 1377,â guest lecturer for Dr Christian Carrâs museum studies course, Savannah College of Art and Design, 23 October 2020
- âSculptural Practice in the Burgundian Netherlands: Two Case Studies of Jan Borreman,â seminar lecture and in-galleryÌęclase prĂĄctica, Escuela del Prado seminario â,â Museo del Prado, 28 January 2020
- Exhibition study day site visit,ÌęThe Tomb of Mary of Burgundy,Ìę, Onze-Lieve-Vrouwekerk, Bruges, 28 November 2019
- Museum staff development,ÌęOur Gallery: Medals Handling Session, National Gallery of Art, 12 and 13 November 2019
- Museum docent workshop: Dutch Golden Age, National Gallery of Art Education Department, 19 February 2019; 4 November 2015
- Food for Thought seminar: âSugar and Spice and Everything Nice: Reflections of Abundance in the Dutch Golden Age,â National Gallery of Art Education Department, April 2015
- Guest lecturer, âObjects and Material Culture,â undergraduate seminar on Italian renaissance art, Georgetown University history department, April 2014
- Gallery talks on Tilman Riemenschneiderâs Bishop Saint; Netherlandish tapestry cushions; âThree Tudor Portraits by Holbein and Gheeraerts;â âThe Torpedoing of the Tubantia: a German WWI propaganda medal,â National Gallery of Art, winterâspring 2012.
- Gallery talk onÌęPortrait of Sir John LuttrellÌęby Hans Eworth, Courtauld Gallery, March 2011
Other academic activities
- Interdisciplinary Resident, , autumn 2022
- Research scholarship recipient, , December 2018
- Participant, Graduate Seminar âInvention and Observation in Italian Renaissance and Baroque Drawings,â with Sir Nicholas Penny, Drawing Institute, The Morgan Library & Museum, 4 May 2018
- Research Support Grant recipient, Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art, âThe armored body and sculptural practice in medieval English brass tomb effigies,â
- Organizer, Eight Quadrennial Italian Renaissance Sculpture Conference (âCenters of Renaissance Sculptural Productionâ), National Gallery of Art, 26â28 October 2017
- Participant, Summer Course for the Study of the Arts in Flanders: âMedieval and Renaissance Sculpture in the Low Countries,â M-Leuven and Vlaamse Kunstcollectie, summer 2017
- Research subject (electroencephalography), âA Neuroscientific and Cognitive-Forensic Examination of Individual Differences in Face Recognition Ability,â University of Greenwich, 5 October 2016
- Participant and Samuel H. Kress History of Art Grant recipient, ,â Groeningemuseum and Flemish Research Centre for the Arts in the Burgundian Netherlands, summer 2015
- Research group member, âReligion, Art and Conflict: disputes, destruction, and creation,â Courtauld Institute of Art Research Forum, JuneâDecember 2014
- Member, Historians of Netherlandish Art
- Member, Renaissance Society of America
- Member, International Center of Medieval Art
- Volunteer, Folger Shakespeare Library, 2012âpresent