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This painting is 600 years old.

And that mirror in the background is barely ten centimetres across, yet it contains a reflection of the entire room.

Including the artist at work, one of the greatest painters who ever lived, a man called Jan van Eyck...
Jan van Eyck (1390-1441) was the greatest painter of the Early Renaissance in Northern Europe.

We'll get to his brilliance, but the first thing to understand is that the Renaissance in Northern Europe was different to the Italian Renaissance of Leonardo and Michelangelo...
See, this is what Medieval art looked like before the Renaissance.

It was about telling the stories of the Bible and of Christian myth in visual form.

Realism didn't matter to these artists; they focussed on what was important to them.
So things like perspective and depth weren't a feature of Medieval art. Saints weren't drawn "realistically" - it was more important that they could be recognised.

Often their paintings weren't set in a specific place; the background was decorative, even plain gold.
And this disinterest in realism led these artists to embrace quite wonderful compositional patterns.

Much Medieval art was beautifully ornate and semi-abstract:
And, as time went by, they didn't just paint scenes from the Bible. They also depicted life in the Middle Ages: of feasts, hunts, and knightly tournaments.

The ordinary world was now a part of Medieval art.
But in Italy - first through Giotto in the early 1300s, followed by Masaccio a century later - perspective was introducted into art.

Paintings were now three-dimensional. People had weight. They seemed to be standing in real places. Things became more realistic.
In Italy this discovery led artists to attempt a conquest of reality. They mastered the skill of painting human forms as they truly appear.

More than that - inspired by Roman statues - they sought to idealise the human form. Compare these two versions of the Annunciation:
This Classical interest in "ideal beauty" did not spread to Northern Europe, but the discovery of perspective did.

Enter the "International Gothic" style of the late 14th century. Those formerly flat and quasi-abstract Gothic paintings now had depth:
But they retained much of the same flamboyance and extravagance and cluttered compositions of traditional Medieval art.

That interest in patterns had transformed into a fascination with detail - the detail of armour, stone, cloth, and embroidery.
And this produced a real difference in style between Northern Europe and Italy.

Whereas the great Italian artists of the age were painting scenes from Biblical and Classical mythology with a focus on ideal beauty, realistic forms, and clean, harmonious compositions...
The Northern European painters were simply using these new artistic skills to enhance their existing interest in the messages of the Bible, of ordinary life, and of detailed patterns.

Like in the work of the great Limbourg Brothers in the early 15th century:
And so finally we come to Jan van Eyck, born in the Netherlands in 1390, who would take Gothic art to its extreme.

His greatest achievement was to bring an almost unbelievable realism of detail and texture to painting:
His artistic heritage - of Gothic ornateness and disinterest in idealism - led him to focus very deeply on the texture of *things* as they actually appeared.

He added layer upon layer of detail until they became - via a different method to the Italians - realistic.
A key part of Jan van Eyck's story is his use of oil painting.

Some say he actually invented it; others disagree. It doesn't matter. The point is that he mastered oil paint and learned that adding multiple, thin, translucent layers created vivid colours and textures:

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