Men Shoveling Chairs (Scupstoel) 1444-50 Circle of Rogier van der Weyden, possibly Vranke van der Stockt Netherlandish This remarkable drawing - among the few extant fifteenth-century designs for representational sculpture - is a study for one of three narrative capitals carved for the Brussels town hall between 1444 and 1450. The subject is a pun on the word scupstoel (literally shovel chair”), a contraption used for public humiliation in which felons were raised above water and then dropped in. Scupstoel was also the name of a house that previously stood on the site of the new wing of the town hall. An inscription on the drawing’s reverse indicates that the drawing served as a patroen, a model that may illustrate an intermediary stage between the preliminary sketch and the detailed pattern used by the sculptors of the capital. Its curved design suggests the three-dimensional form of the capital. Traditionally associated with the circle of Rogier van der Weyden, the renowned Netherla

Men Shoveling Chairs (Scupstoel) 1444-50 Circle of Rogier van der Weyden, possibly Vranke van der Stockt Netherlandish This remarkable drawing - among the few extant fifteenth-century designs for representational sculpture - is a study for one of three narrative capitals carved for the Brussels town hall between 1444 and 1450. The subject is a pun on the word scupstoel (literally shovel chair”), a contraption used for public humiliation in which felons were raised above water and then dropped in. Scupstoel was also the name of a house that previously stood on the site of the new wing of the town hall. An inscription on the drawing’s reverse indicates that the drawing served as a patroen, a model that may illustrate an intermediary stage between the preliminary sketch and the detailed pattern used by the sculptors of the capital. Its curved design suggests the three-dimensional form of the capital. Traditionally associated with the circle of Rogier van der Weyden, the renowned Netherla
SuperStock offers millions of photos, videos, and stock assets to creatives around the world. This image of Men Shoveling Chairs (Scupstoel) 1444-50 Circle of Rogier van der Weyden, possibly Vranke van der Stockt Netherlandish This remarkable drawing - among the few extant fifteenth-century designs for representational sculpture - is a study for one of three narrative capitals carved for the Brussels town hall between 1444 and 1450. The subject is a pun on the word scupstoel (literally shovel chair”), a contraption used for public humiliation in which felons were raised above water and then dropped in. Scupstoel was also the name of a house that previously stood on the site of the new wing of the town hall. An inscription on the drawing’s reverse indicates that the drawing served as a patroen, a model that may illustrate an intermediary stage between the preliminary sketch and the detailed pattern used by the sculptors of the capital. Its curved design suggests the three-dimensional form of the capital. Traditionally associated with the circle of Rogier van der Weyden, the renowned Netherla by Piemags/PL Photography Limited is available for licensing today.
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Image Number: 6145-29187812Royalty FreeCredit Line:Piemags/PL Photography Limited/SuperStockCollection:PL Photography LimitedContributor:PiemagsModel Release:NoProperty Release:NoResolution:3899×2753
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