,
Annunciation and Visitation (1393–1399), left panel of a pair; (
Dijon, Musée des Beaux-Arts) , 1416.
Louvre Champmol was designed as a showpiece, and the artistic contents, now dispersed, represent much of the finest monumental work, as opposed to
illuminated manuscripts, of French and Burgundian art of the period. Without the works that remained at Champmol until the 18th century,
Claus Sluter,
Jacques de Baerze,
Melchior Broederlam,
Henri Bellechose,
Jean Malouel, and
Jean de Beaumetz would remain only names known from documentary records.
Still at Champmol There are very important sculptures by
Claus Sluter and his workshop on the church portal, including kneeling figures of Philip and his Duchess. The lower parts of the
Well of Moses (
Puits de Moise) survive, including six life-size figures of the
Old Testament prophets who foretold the
Messiah, most of the rest having been destroyed, apparently more by weathering than the Revolution.
In Dijon museums Most items are in the Musée des Beaux-Arts, including its site in the former palace of the Dukes. The fragments from the Well of Moses and other similar pieces are in the Archaeological Museum. The following are only the main works in Dijon: • Two painted and gilded carved wood
retables, that are almost the only remaining works by the Flemish sculptor
Jacques de Baerze, and also the only complete Netherlandish carved altarpieces before the late 15th century. The outer panels of the larger are the only surviving paintings by
Melchior Broederlam, and highly important works for tracing the development of
Early Netherlandish painting. Broederlam also painted and gilded the carvings by de Baerze. • The tombs (in fact always
cenotaphs) of the Dukes of Burgundy; the museum has the tombs of Philip the Bold and his son
John the Fearless with his wife
Margaret of Bavaria. The effigies are 19th-century reconstructions, from old drawings and prints, of the originals which were destroyed in the Revolution. About ten of the "pleurants" are also copies of originals liberated or lost. • The funerary crown of Philip the Bold, in
brass and glass. • The head and torso of the crucified Christ from the Well of Moses. • The
Retable of Saint George, an early-15th-century painted altarpiece, probably donated by one of the monks, whose
donor portrait appears at the foot of the crucified Christ. • One of the crucifixions from the two hermitages added in 1433. • Two altarpieces by
Charles-André van Loo, which replaced older works (one the
Retable of Saint George) in 1741.
Elsewhere relief triptychs by the
Embriachi workshops, 1397 •
Louvre, the
Martyrdom of Saint Denis by Henri Bellechose, the
tondo of the
Pietà by Jean Malouel, and one of 24 paintings of the crucifixion for the monks' hermitages by Jean de Beaumetz, all of which are the best known works of each artist. •
Washington, National Gallery of Art, the
Annunciation by Jan van Eyck; the two other panels of the
triptych recorded at Champmol in 1791 have been lost. •
Gemäldegalerie, Berlin, a large
Madonna and Child, only rediscovered in 1960 and now on loan to the Gemäldegalerie, is attributed to Jean Malouel It is believed the Berlin picture was one wing of a
diptych for Champmol, opposite a portrait of John the Fearless. •
Cleveland Museum of Art, the only other one of the 24 paintings by Jean de Beaumetz to survive, and four "pleurant" figures from Philip's tomb. • Baltimore,
Walters Art Museum, half of the "Antwerp-Baltimore Polyptych" c. 1400. • Antwerp, the other three scenes of the "Antwerp-Baltimore Polyptych" •
Musée de Cluny, Paris, two bone and
ivory relief triptychs by the leading Italian
Embriachi workshop, donated by Duke Philip in 1393. • Chicago (
Art Institute of Chicago), the figure from a gilded and painted wood
crucifix by de Baerze and Broederlam.
Gallery Dijon - Puits de Moïse - 03.jpg|The base of the
Well of Moses shows the prophets who foretold the coming of Christ File:La Grande Pietà ronde - attribué à Jean Malouel - Musée du Louvre Peintures MI 692.jpg|
Pietà by
Jean Malouel, Philip's court painter,
Louvre, 1400–15 Dijon - Musée des Beaux-Arts - Retable des Saints et Martyrs - 2.jpg|Scene from a retable by
Jacques de Baerze, Dijon. File:Annunciation - Jan van Eyck - 1434 - NG Wash DC.jpg|
Annunciation by Jan van Eyck, from around 1434–1436, Washington. ==Later history==