Wallraf-Richartz-Museum & Fondation Corboud

VISION AND REALITY


In this Gallery one can feel the enormous tension which accompanied people’s lives during the late Middle Ages, an era of change. On the one side was the daily reality that surrounded them: human environments from the town and country crept into the altarpieces in the form of backgrounds (see Gallery 7). On the other side there was the prospect of life after death. This was linked with hopes of eternal life in Paradise, but also with fears of punishment in Hell’s fires.

The painters developed specific forms and ideas to depict these opposites. One ingenious Cologne painter “portrayed” the river and land sides of his home town on the front and rear sides of a panel. But for a visionary subject, the “Visitation of Mary and Jesus”, that same artist used a number of large, rounded forms. They are arranged rhythmically, or indeed almost musically in his composition. A comparison between this Glorification of the Virgin and the neighbouring paintings reveals that such large, rounded forms were in fact a highly popular means of depicting mysterious and mystical visions of the end of time.

Unlike people today, history was not regarded in the Middle Ages as flowing ever onward. The understanding of history at that time was “teleological”, which is to say, directed towards a goal. The goal and simultaneously the end of history was the Last Judgement and the Apocalypse, the Resurrection of Humankind, and the descent of the New Jerusalem (Paradise) to Earth. This serves as the common denominator of the quite diverse paintings in this gallery: the “portrait” of the City of Cologne depicts the city beneath a golden sky – as the image and anticipation of the New Jerusalem: a city as paradise… 

  • Master of the Vision of St John (active in Cologne, c. 1450 - 1470): The Vision of St John, c. 1450. Oak, 132.3 x 161.5 cm. Collection of Ferdinand Franz Wallraf. WRM 0113. Photo: Rheinisches Bildarchiv Köln
    Master of the Vision of St John (active in Cologne, c. 1450 - 1470): The Vision of St John, c. 1450. Oak, 132.3 x 161.5 cm. Collection of Ferdinand Franz Wallraf. WRM 0113. Photo: Rheinisches Bildarchiv Köln
  • Lower Rhine, c. 1450/1475: Coronation of Mary with the Twenty-Four Elders. Oak, 104.5 x 147.3 cm. Acquired in 1909. WRM 0112. Photo: Rheinisches Bildarchiv Köln
    Lower Rhine, c. 1450/1475: Coronation of Mary with the Twenty-Four Elders. Oak, 104.5 x 147.3 cm. Acquired in 1909. WRM 0112. Photo: Rheinisches Bildarchiv Köln
  • Master of the Glorification of the Virgin (active in Cologne, second half of the 15th century): The Glorification of the Virgin, c. 1470. Oak, 163 x 197 cm. Collection of Ferdinand Franz Wallraf. WRM 0119. Photo: Rheinisches Bildarchiv Köln
    Master of the Glorification of the Virgin (active in Cologne, second half of the 15th century): The Glorification of the Virgin, c. 1470. Oak, 163 x 197 cm. Collection of Ferdinand Franz Wallraf. WRM 0119. Photo: Rheinisches Bildarchiv Köln
  • Master of the Glorification of the Virgin (active in Cologne, second half of the 15th century): St Anna, the Virgin and the Christ Child with Saints Christopher, Gereon and Peter, c. 1480 (formerly the front side of the retable with WRM 0121). Oak, 131 x 145 cm (image size). Collection of Ferdinand Franz Wallraf. WRM 0120. Photo: Rheinisches Bildarchiv Köln
    Master of the Glorification of the Virgin (active in Cologne, second half of the 15th century): St Anna, the Virgin and the Christ Child with Saints Christopher, Gereon and Peter, c. 1480 (formerly the front side of the retable with WRM 0121). Oak, 131 x 145 cm (image size). Collection of Ferdinand Franz Wallraf. WRM 0120. Photo: Rheinisches Bildarchiv Köln
  • Master of the Glorification of the Virgin (active in Cologne, second half of the 15th century): Saints Clare, Bernard, Bonaventure and Francis, c. 1480 (formerly the rear side of the retable with WRM 0120). Oak, 131 x 145 cm (image size). Collection of Ferdinand Franz Wallraf. WRM 0121. Photo: Rheinisches Bildarchiv Köln
    Master of the Glorification of the Virgin (active in Cologne, second half of the 15th century): Saints Clare, Bernard, Bonaventure and Francis, c. 1480 (formerly the rear side of the retable with WRM 0120). Oak, 131 x 145 cm (image size). Collection of Ferdinand Franz Wallraf. WRM 0121. Photo: Rheinisches Bildarchiv Köln
  • Master of the Legend of St Catharine (active in Brussels, last third of the 15th century): Triptych with the Descent from the Cross, last third of the 15th century. Wood, 129 x 95 cm (central panel), 129 x 43.5 cm (wing). On permanent loan from the Franciscan Monastery in Cologne. WRM Dep. 0029. Photo: Rheinisches Bildarchiv Köln
    Master of the Legend of St Catharine (active in Brussels, last third of the 15th century): Triptych with the Descent from the Cross, last third of the 15th century. Wood, 129 x 95 cm (central panel), 129 x 43.5 cm (wing). On permanent loan from the Franciscan Monastery in Cologne. WRM Dep. 0029. Photo: Rheinisches Bildarchiv Köln