manuel cohen

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Altarpiece, Hospices de Beaune, Beaune, Burgundy, France

The damned falling in terror into hell, from the open panels of the polyptych altarpiece, 1446-52, by Rogier van der Weyden, 1399-1464, commissioned by Nicolas Rolin in 1443, in Les Hospices de Beaune, or Hotel-Dieu de Beaune, a charitable almshouse and hospital for the poor, built 1443-57 by Flemish architect Jacques Wiscrer, and founded by Nicolas Rolin, chancellor of Burgundy, and his wife Guigone de Salins, in Beaune, Cote d'Or, Burgundy, France. The altarpiece was originally in the Chapel, but is now in the museum. The panels were only opened to patients during holy days. The hospital was run by the nuns of the order of Les Soeurs Hospitalieres de Beaune, and remained a hospital until the 1970s. The building now houses the Musee de l'Histoire de la Medecine, or Museum of the History of Medicine, and is listed as a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen

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Filename
LC16_FRANCE_MC_0117.jpg
Copyright
© Manuel Cohen
Image Size
5906x3937 / 10.4MB
www.manuelcohen.com
15th century almshouse altarpiece art Beaune Beaune altarpiece belief Bourgogne Bourgogne-Franche-Comte Burgundian Burgundy charity christian christianity color colour Cote d'Or damned dragging Eastern Europe Eastern European Europe European expression faith fine arts France French grabbing Guigone de Salins hell heritage historic monument history horizontal hospice Hospices de Beaune hospital hotel-dieu Hotel-Dieu de Beaune image indoors inside interior judgement day Last Judgement Last Judgment Les Hospices de Beaune Les Soeurs Hospitalieres de Beaune monument historique Musee de l'Histoire de la Medecine museum Museum of the History of Medicine Nicolas Rolin Northern Renaissance open panels pain painting polyptych pulling religion religious Rogier van der Weyden sacred sinner terror torture tourism tourist attraction travel
Contained in galleries
Les Hospices de Beaune, Burgundy, France
The damned falling in terror into hell, from the open panels of the polyptych altarpiece, 1446-52, by Rogier van der Weyden, 1399-1464, commissioned by Nicolas Rolin in 1443, in Les Hospices de Beaune, or Hotel-Dieu de Beaune, a charitable almshouse and hospital for the poor, built 1443-57 by Flemish architect Jacques Wiscrer, and founded by Nicolas Rolin, chancellor of Burgundy, and his wife Guigone de Salins, in Beaune, Cote d'Or, Burgundy, France. The altarpiece was originally in the Chapel, but is now in the museum. The panels were only opened to patients during holy days. The hospital was run by the nuns of the order of Les Soeurs Hospitalieres de Beaune, and remained a hospital until the 1970s. The building now houses the Musee de l'Histoire de la Medecine, or Museum of the History of Medicine, and is listed as a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen