Unisa Institutional Repository

'Dulle Griet' in seventeenth-century Flemish painting : a risible image of popular peasant culture

Show full item record

Title: 'Dulle Griet' in seventeenth-century Flemish painting : a risible image of popular peasant culture
Author: Van Haute, Bernadette
Abstract: This article investigates the representation of "dulle Griet" by the seventeenth-century artists David II Teniers and David III Ryckaert in the context of Catholic Flanders. In a society preoccupied with hierarchical order both the state and church aimed to root out archaic beliefs and customs, and to save society from witchcraft. The representations of mad Meg are interpreted as comic archaisms satirising the magical culture of the peasants to confirm the superiority of the urban elite. While these imaginative inventions heightened their artistic prestige and social standing, it is argued that the painters also contributed to the efforts to demystify the ideology of witch hunting.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10500/6958
http://reference.sabinet.co.za/webx/access/electronic_journals/academ/academ_v43_n2_a1.pdf
Date: 2011
Citation: Van Haute, B (2011) ‘Dulle Griet’ in seventeenth-century Flemish painting: a risible image of popular peasant culture. Acta Academica 2011 43(2)1-40


Files in this item

Files Size Format View
Van Haute_Dulle Griet_11.pdf 702.9Kb PDF View/Open

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show full item record

Search UnisaIR


Browse

My Account

Statistics