Explore Hans Memling at the Thyssen-Bornemisza National Museum: refined portraits, luminous colour, and symbolic still life reveal Northern Renaissance devotion and artistic innovation.
Morrison Triptych
Discover the Morrison Triptych by the Master of the Morrison Triptych—a luminous work exploring sin, redemption, and devotional beauty.
Charon crossing the Styx by Joachim Patinir
Patinir’s Charon Crossing the Styx navigates between Christian paradise and Greek Hades — a haunting Northern Renaissance masterpiece where mythology, morality, and breathtaking landscape powerfully converge.
Madonna with Child in a Landscape
In Burgos Cathedral’s Gothic Chapel of the Constables, the Master of the Madonna Grog’s luminous triptych tenderly unites divine motherhood, symbolic flowers, and Northern Renaissance naturalism beautifully.
The Tower of Babel by Pieter Bruegel the Elder
The Tower of Babel transforms the biblical tale of Genesis 11:1–9 into a vivid panorama of human ambition, unity, and divine disruption, capturing the fragility of grand aspirations.
Virgin and Child
Inspired by Vittoria Colonna’s poetic devotion, this intimate Virgin and Child—attributed to Simon Bening—blends Flemish symbolism and tender realism, presenting Mary as a nurturing, humble source of spiritual and physical solace.
Eros and the Bee
Theocritus’ playful tale of Eros stealing honey—only to be stung—becomes, in Cranach’s paintings, a moral allegory on desire, pleasure, and the painful consequences hidden within sweetness and beauty.
Simon Bening’s December
Simon Bening’s luminous December miniature captures festive anticipation — bread baking, animals slaughtered, hunters departing — a Flemish world poised breathlessly before Christmas celebration begins.
Simon Bening’s November
Bening’s luminous November miniature captures aristocratic splendor — a nobleman triumphantly returning, antlered stag in tow, hounds straining — hunting elevated to magnificent courtly theater.
Simon Bening’s October
Bening’s intoxicating October miniature — nobles tasting, peasants pressing, barrels groaning — distills Renaissance Flemish winemaking into one luminous, grape-soaked masterpiece of observation.






