15th century
I walk on and see the works by Rogier Van der Weyden, Jacques Daret, Hans Memling, masters, followers and anonymous people completing the extraordinary collection of Flemish primitives.
I enter a long gallery, on the left side and in between the windows on the Paseo del Prado, many portraits are hanging. In the left wing, each room is dedicated to a specific theme. I enter one which is not very large; various portrait boards hang from the walls. There is enough space in between them so that you don’t get disturbed while observing. I was struck by one in particular, the portrait of a man looking less noble or maybe cruder than the rest; the title "Portrait of a robust man", painted towards 1425. It could be Robert de Masmine, a military who fought for Philip the Good of Bourgogne who was not a nobody since he owned the Golden Fleece. Important fact: I was told this board was considered the first autonomous board of Flemish painting. The author, Robert Campin (1375(?)-1444), impresses with the truthfulness with which he drew the lines of the character's face, his wrinkles, his eyelids, his beard, his hair. A great work of art, yes sir.
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![](https://images.mnstatic.com/98/3a/983ac3cb1ac483716176f384c161da40.jpg?quality=75&format=png&fit=crop&width=65&height=65&aspect_ratio=65%3A65)