3 – Renaissance Art at the Crossroads: Italy and the Netherlands

Online

Course 3 – Summer School online

Monday 9 – Friday 13 June 2025
Dr Richard Williams
£395

Course description

The impact of Netherlandish painting, founded by Jan van Eyck and Rogier van der Weyden, was so profound in Italy that it changed the direction of Italian Renaissance art. From Filippo Lippi to Raphael, Italian painters switched from egg tempera to the Netherlandish technique of painting in oils, adopted the Northern approach to portraiture, emulated the depiction of light, texture and other illusionistic effects, and even copied landscape backgrounds from imported Northern altarpieces.

In the fifteenth century this influence traveled almost exclusively in one direction from north to south. However, in the sixteenth century this direction was effectively to reverse as the works of Michelangelo and other Italian masters caught the imagination of Netherlandish artists and their patrons, from Gossaert ultimately to Rubens.

This course takes a broad perspective to explore Renaissance art of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries as an endlessly creative cross-cultural fertilisation between Italy and Northern Europe.

How to book

To book your chosen course(s) please use the book now button below and you will be taken to our booking system where you can book and pay (Visa / Mastercard / GooglePay / ApplePay).

At checkout, you will be prompted to login (if you have previously booked gallery tickets) or to register and create a new account.

(Please note: this ticketing login is not the same as your Short Courses VLE login if you have one).

Please note that in the EU new VAT rules for online courses are coming into effect.  This means that from 1 January 2025 we will be required to charge EU participants their local VAT rate.  VAT-inclusive prices for EU students will be displayed at check-out.

If you have any questions please email us at short.courses@courtauld.ac.uk

Lecturer's biography

Dr Richard Williams completed his doctorate at The Courtauld and was awarded a post-doctoral fellowship by Yale University. Following this he was a specialist in Northern Renaissance art in the art history department at Birkbeck, University of London. More recently he has been appointed Learning Curator at the Royal Collection and is based at Windsor Castle and Buckingham Palace. His published research focuses on art in England and other regions of Northern Europe in the sixteenth century.

Citations