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The paintings of fanatical late medieval artist Hieronymus Bosch were popular for their little nightmare details: a man playing a flute made out of his own nose, or a bird-monster devouring ...
If you look closely at the paintings of Hieronymus Bosch — they’re jammed with so many tiny, tucked-away micro-portraits that you almost have to look closely at them — you’ll see images ...
Imaginary animals dance across the panels of artist Hieronymus Bosch's paintings: There are snails with human legs, fish with human arms and at least one spider-legged peacock. Since his death in ...
A new exhibition in Budapest features almost 90 works by the Dutch artist and his peers Meilan Solly - Senior Associate Digital Editor, History In Hieronymus Bosch’s visions of hell, Satan and ...
Hieronymus Bosch, elusive conjurer of jewel-like panoramas ... and the United States, the paintings themselves are a feast for the eye. Hung in under-illuminated halls for protection, they gleam ...
And, though the premise of watching people move paintings sounds terribly tedious, Pieter van Huystee’s Hieronymus Bosch: Touched by the Devil provides an intriguing mélange of international ...
Born Jeroen van Aken around 1450, the artist later changed his name to the more regal-sounding Hieronymus Bosch to attract patrons and distinguish himself in a family of painters. His birth ...
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