"[A] fascinating and beautifully produced book... Marisa Anne Bass's fine book can help open up a debate about specific artists, about the role of traditions in the shaping of art, and about the relationship between a sixteenth-century moment and a twentieth-century one, which is long overdue."--Gabriel Josipovici, Times Literary Supplement "A satisfyingly lavishly illustrated, beautifully written and detailed study of one of the Renaissance's most important northern European painters, Jan Gossart."--Karen Shook, Times Higher Education "Totally original as well as lavishly illustrated, Jan Gossart and the Invention of Netherlandish Antiquity is as idiosyncratically informative as it is occasionally spellbinding."--David Marx, David Marx Reviews "This is a rich and rewarding book that wears its learning lightly and is full of insights into place and period. Succinct, well written and very well illustrated, Bass's book provides a stimulating guide to Gossart's work and a fresh perspective on the Renaissance in a specific area of Northern Europe."--Susan Foister, Art Newspaper "This well-documented, richly illustrated book offers an in-depth study of the career of Netherlandish artist Jan Gossart. Bass focuses on the artist's representations of classical and mythological subjects, and for the most part she bases the discussion on primary sources in Latin, Dutch, and French--sources not previously used by art historians and scholars in association with Gossart's works... A well-balanced interplay of visual analyses and historical investigations."--Choice "Beautifully written and full of provocative insights into the humanist ambiance and intellectual network associated with Jan Gossart's mythological paintings."--Maryan W. Ainsworth, Burlington Magazine
"With great enthusiasm and erudition, Marisa Anne Bass situates Jan Gossart in the intellectual network of his Netherlandish patrons and thoroughly investigates the literary output of the humanist circles that he and his patrons moved in. Bass has unearthed a vast number of important texts that shed light on the intellectual concerns of the period."—Dagmar Eichberger, University of Trier and University of Heidelberg