The topic of the workshop entitled 'Role and status of journeyman in
artists' and craftmen's workshops in the Low Countries c. 1450 - c.
1650', held in Groningen, 23-24 May 2003, grew out of archival and
material-technical research on workshop practices. As a result of this
research it gradually became clear that more knowledge about the social
and economic mechanisms of art production was required in order to study
the painters' workshop. Such research frequently moves in two or more
directions, and in this case the workshop proceeded on the basis of two
questions: how can socially and economically oriented historical
research help art historians, and what can art historical, and material
and technical research add to corporate history of the painter's guild?
Geographically, the case studies in this volume deal with southern
Netherlandish towns, in particular Antwerp, Brussels, Mechelen, Ghent
and Bruges. One essay focuses on the Dutch Republic. Chronologically,
the contributions treat the late Middle Ages and early Modern Period (c.
1450 and c. 1650). From an artistic point of view, this era can be
characterized as the long 'Golden Age' of Flemish painting. The epoch
witnessed the apogee of the art of the Flemish Primitives and the rise
of the successful genre of Antwerp Mannerism. It also witnessed the
start of the influence of the Italian Renaissance on Flemish art, the
rise of Antwerp over the course of the sixteenth century as the vanguard
of new genres which were exported all over the world, and the
international triumph of the Flemish Baroque after 1610.