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Vain and Transitory Love: Mural Paintings in the Zirovnice Chamber and Mural Decoration in Late Gothic Secular Interiors

Publikace |
2017

Tento text není v aktuálním jazyce dostupný. Zobrazuje se verze "en".Abstrakt

The study presents a detailed analysis of the late medieval murals in the so-called 'green chamber' of Zirovnice Castle. The paintings from the early 149os are exceptional for their artistic quality and they are generally considered a significant example of 'green chambers', secular halls decorated by a green colour and floral ornament.

Compared to the earlier literature the study focuses on the interrelations between the scenes depicted in the 'green chamber': the Judgement of Paris, Judith beheading Holofernes, the exemplum An Old Woman Is Worse than the Devil as well as an image which was previously described as the Judgement of Solomon (perhaps rather a parable about legitimate and illegitimate progeny). They are connected by the historically popular concept of a critique of the power of women (Weibermacht).

In Zirovnice, this concept was connected to the allegory of the transcience of love and the ephemeral nature of the world overall. The ostensible genre depictions of the hunt and tournament, also present in the 'green chamber' of Zirovnice, can be interpreted in this sense as well.

This is demonstrated by numerous details subverting the meaning of these images. The theme of the transience of earthly pleasures probably stands behind another unique part of the murals, a view of Zirovnice itself.

This is concluded on the basis of a comparison with a contemporary drawing by Albrecht Durer and a later print by Erhard Schoen. The study then compares Zirovnice to other similar murals in Bohemia and addresses the question of the art-historical phenomenon of 'green chambers' as various secular murals are called following the Czech art historian Josef Krasa.

Although Krasa's concept may be refuted nowadays, the thematic coherence he noted in various late medieval murals in secular interiors cannot be denied. The study also mentions many examples of this type in Italy, Germany and Austria.