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  1. Aug 10, 2022 · 1 Exploring Black Death Art. 1.1 An Introduction to Black Plague Art; 1.2 What Was the Medieval Bubonic Plague? 1.3 The Emergence of Plague Artworks and the Black Death Paintings; 2 Famous Bubonic Plague Paintings. 2.1 Madonna of Humility (1345-1350) by Guariento di Arpo; 2.2 Persecution of the Jews (c. 1350) by Gilles li Muisis

    • Alicia du Plessis
    • ( Art Writer )
    • Zoe Mann
    • Depicting the Dead. Get the latest articles delivered to your inbox. Sign up to our Free Weekly Newsletter. During the reign of the Black Death, victims were buried in mass burial pits and this work depicts a mass grave in the town of Tournai, Belgium.
    • The ‘Dance of the Dead’ Motif. On a different note, the Danse Macabre, or Dance of the Dead, was a popular and entertaining motif of Medieval art. In this work by Giacomo Borlone de Burchis of Clusone, Italy, Burchis depicts people of all walks of life dancing with skeletons for the Queen of Death who stands at the top of the work holding two scrolls.
    • Devils Sent to Kill. This manuscript was painted in the 14th century in Tuscany where almost half of their population succumbed to the disease. It is a tiny image from a page in the Medieval art manuscript, and is full of action and detail.
    • Virgin Mary. There is no Medieval art without the appearance of the Virgin Mary or Madonna. Iconographies of the mother of Jesus Christ are found in churches and altars everywhere and truly define religious art.
  2. May 18, 2020 · Emily Kasriel explores the art of plague from the Black Death to current times. How have artists portrayed epidemics through history – and what can the art tell us about then and now?

  3. Mar 25, 2020 · In 2012, The Guardian 's art critic Jonathan Jones observed how for 300 years, from the Black Death in 1347 to the London plague that Daniel Defoe observed in 1665, plague was part of life, while artists kept making phenomenal work.

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  5. Inspired by Black Death, The Dance of Death is an allegory on the universality of death and a common painting motif in late medieval period. The Black Death (1346–1353) had great effects on the art and literature of medieval societies that experienced it.

  6. Black Death and medieval art. The impact of the Black Death of 1348 (also called ‘the Great Pestilence’, ‘the Great Plague’, and ‘the Great Mortality’ in its own time) on medieval European culture continues to be investigated by social, economic, demographic, and medical historians. The influence that the Black Death may have had on ...

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