baptized November 7, 1598, Fuente de Cantos, Spain
died August 27, 1664, Madrid
major painter of the Spanish Baroque, especially noted for religious
subjects.His work is characterized by Caravaggesque naturalism and
tenebrism, the latter a style in which most forms are depicted in shadow
but a few are dramatically lighted.
Zurbarán was apprenticed 1614–16 to Pedro Díaz de Villanueva in Sevilla
(Seville), where he spent the greater part of his life. No works by his
master have survived, but Zurbarán's earliest known painting, an
Immaculate Conception dated 1616, suggests that he was schooled in the
same naturalistic style as his contemporary Diego Velázquez. From 1617
to 1628 he was living in Llerena, near his birthplace; then he returned
to Sevilla, where he settled at the invitation of the city corporation.
In 1634 he visited Madrid and painted a series of Labours of Hercules
and two scenes of the Defense of Cádiz, which formed part of the
decoration of the Salón de Reinos in the Buen Retiro palace. The
Adoration of the Kings, from a series painted for the Carthusian
monastery at Jerez, is signed with the title “Painter to the King” and
dated 1638, the year in which Zurbarán decorated a ceremonial ship
presented to the king by the city of Sevilla. The paintings for the Buen
Retiro are the only royal commissions and the only mythological or
historical subjects by Zurbarán that are known. His contact with the
court had little effect on his artistic evolution; he remained
throughout his life a provincial artist and was par excellence a painter
of religious life. In 1658 Zurbarán moved to Madrid.
Zurbarán's personal style was already formed in Sevilla by 1629, and its
development was probably stimulated by the early works of Velázquez and
by the works of José de Ribera. It was a style that lent itself well to
portraiture and still life, but it found its most characteristic
expression in his religioussubjects. Indeed Zurbarán uses naturalism
more convincingly than other exponents for the expression of intense
religious devotion. His apostles, saints, and monks are painted with
almost sculptural modeling and with an emphasis on the minutiae of their
dress that gives verisimilitude to their miracles, visions, and
ecstasies. This distinctive combination of realism and religious
sensibility conforms to the Counter-Reformation guidelines for artists
outlined by the Council of Trent (1545–63). Zurbarán's art was popular
with monastic orders in Sevilla and the neighbouring provinces, and he
received commissions for many large cycles. Of these, only the legends
of St. Jerome and of the Hieronymite monks (1638–39) that decorate the
chapel and sacristy of the Hieronymite monastery at Guadalupe have
remained in situ. Little is known of his production in the 1640s apart
from an altarpiece at Zafra (1643–44) and records of a large number of
paintings destined for Lima, Peru (1647). By 1658 both the style and the
content of Zurbarán's paintings had undergone a change that can be
attributed to the influence of Bartolomé Esteban Murillo. In his late
devotional pictures, such as Holy Family and Immaculate Conception (1659
and 1661, respectively), the figures have become more idealized and less
solid in form, and their expression ofreligious emotion is marred by
sentimentality. Zurbarán had several followers whose works have been
confused with his.