Butcher's Shop, with the Flight into Egypt
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''[[Butcher's Shop, with the Flight into Egypt]]''[http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Pieter_Aertsen_005.jpg] ([[Uppsala University|Uppsala]], 1551) by [[Pieter Aertsen]]. | ''[[Butcher's Shop, with the Flight into Egypt]]''[http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Pieter_Aertsen_005.jpg] ([[Uppsala University|Uppsala]], 1551) by [[Pieter Aertsen]]. | ||
- | + | In the Uppsala painting the zones behind the butcher's stall show (from left) a view through a window of a church, the [[Holy Family]] distributing alms on their journey, a worker in the mid-ground, with a [[merry company]] eating [[mussel]]s and [[oyster]]s (believed to promote lust) in a back room behind. The sign at top right advertises the land behind as for sale. The painting offers the viewer a range of options for life, in an [[allegory]] on physical and spiritual food. The painting carries the coat of arms of Antwerp, suggesting it was a civic commission, perhaps by the rich Butcher's [[Guild]]. Such subjects were mostly painted before about 1560. | |
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Butcher's Shop, with the Flight into Egypt[1] (Uppsala, 1551) by Pieter Aertsen.
In the Uppsala painting the zones behind the butcher's stall show (from left) a view through a window of a church, the Holy Family distributing alms on their journey, a worker in the mid-ground, with a merry company eating mussels and oysters (believed to promote lust) in a back room behind. The sign at top right advertises the land behind as for sale. The painting offers the viewer a range of options for life, in an allegory on physical and spiritual food. The painting carries the coat of arms of Antwerp, suggesting it was a civic commission, perhaps by the rich Butcher's Guild. Such subjects were mostly painted before about 1560.
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