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Baroque and Rococo
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Baroque and Rococo
Art Map
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EXPLORATION:
Velazquez
"The Face
of Spain"
by
Norbert Wolf
Diego Velazquez
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"He is the painter of
painters"
Edouard Manet
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Velazquez
Self-Portrait
1643
Oil on canvas, 70 x 58 cm
Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence
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Diego Velazquez
(Encyclopaedia Britannica)
baptized June 6, 1599, Sevilla, Spain
died August 6, 1660, Madrid
in full Diego Rodríguez de Silva Velázquez the most important Spanish
painter of the 17th century, a giant of Western art.
Velázquez is universally acknowledged as one of the world's greatest
artists. The naturalistic style in which he was trained provided a
language for the expression of his remarkable power of observation in
portraying both the living model and still life. Stimulated by the study
of 16th-century Venetian painting, he developed from a master of
faithful likeness and characterization into the creator of masterpieces
of visual impression unique in his time. With brilliant diversity of
brushstrokes and subtle harmonies of colour, he achieved effects of form
and texture, space, light, and atmosphere, that make him the chief
forerunner of 19th-century French Impressionism.
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Velazquez
Yong Man
c. 1629
Oil on canvas, 89 x 69 cm
Alte Pinakothek, Munich
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The principal source of information about Velázquez's early career is
the treatise Arte de la pintura (“The Art of Painting”), published in
1649 by his master and father-in-law Francisco Pacheco, who is more
important as a biographer and theoretician than as a painter. The first
complete biography of Velázquez appeared in the third volume (El Parnaso
español; “The Spanish Parnassus”) of El museo pictórico y escala óptica
(“The Pictorial Museum and Optical Scale”), published in 1724 by the
court painter and art scholar Antonio Palomino. This was based on
biographical notes made by Velázquez's pupil Juan de Alfaro, who was
Palomino's patron. The number of personal documents is very small, and
official documentation relating to his paintings is relatively rare.
Since he seldom signed or dated his works, their identification and
chronology has often to be based on stylistic evidence alone. Though
many copies of his portaits were evidently made in his studio by
assistants, his own production was not large and his surviving autograph
works number fewer than 150. He is known to have worked slowly, and
during his later years much of his time was occupied by his duties as a
court official in Madrid.
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Velazquez
The Jester Known as Don Juan de Austria
1632-35
Oil on canvas, 210 x 123 cm
Museo del Prado, Madrid
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Sevilla (Seville)
According to Palomino, Velázquez's first master was the Sevillian
painter Francisco Herrera the Elder (c. 1576–1656). In 1611 he was
formally apprenticed to Francisco Pacheco, whose daughter he married in
1618. “After five years of education and training,” Pacheco writes, “I
married him to my daughter, moved by his virtue, integrity, and good
parts and by the expectations of his disposition and great talent.”
Although Pacheco was himself a mediocre Mannerist painter,it was through
his teaching that Velázquez developed his early naturalistic style. “He
worked from life,” writes Pacheco, “making numerous studies of his model
in various poses and thereby he gained certainty in his portraiture.” He
was not more than 20 when he painted the Water Seller of Seville (c.
1619), in which the control of the composition, colour, and light, the
naturalness of the figures and their poses, and realistic still life
already reveal his keen eye and prodigious facility with the brush. The
strong modeling and sharp contrasts of light and shade of Velázquez's
early illusionistic style closely resemble the technique of dramatic
lighting called tenebrism, which was one of the innovations of the
Italian painter Caravaggio (1573–1610). Velázquez's early subjects were
mostly religious or genre (scenes of daily life). He popularized a new
type of composition in Spanish painting, the bodegón , a kitchen scene
with prominent still life, such as the Old Woman Frying Eggs. Sometimes
the bodegones had religious scenes in the background, as in Christ in
the House of Martha and Mary. The Adoration of the Magi is one of the
few Sevillian paintings of Velázquez that have remained in Spain.
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Velazquez
A Young Lady
1635
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Court painter in Madrid
In 1622, a year after Philip IV came to the throne, Velázquez visited
Madrid for the first time, in the hope of obtaining royal patronage. He
painted a portait of the poet Luis de Góngora (1622), but there was no
opportunity of portraying the king or queen. In the following year he
was recalled to Madrid by the prime minister, Count Olivares, a fellow
Sevillian and a future patron. Soon after his arrival he painted a
portrait of Philip IV that won him immediate success. He was appointed
court painter with a promise that no one else should portray the king.
Pacheco describes an equestrian portrait of Philip (lost) painted soon
afterward, “all taken from life, even the landscape”; the portrait was
exhibited publicly “to the admiration of all the Court and the envy of
members of the profession.” The envy of fellow artists, who accused
Velázquez of only being able to paint heads, is said to have been the
occasion of the king's ordering him to paint a historical subject, the
Expulsion of the Moriscos (lost), in competition with other court
painters. Velázquez was awarded the prize and the appointment in 1627 of
gentleman usher to the king. Though he continued to paint other
subjects, as court painter he was chiefly occupiedin portraying members
of the royal family and their entourage, and he painted numerous
portraits of Philip IV during the course of his life. “The liberality
and affability with which he is treated by such a great monarch is
unbelievable,” writes Pacheco. “He has a workshop in his gallery and His
Majesty has a key to it and a chair in order to watch him painting at
leisure, nearly every day.”
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Velazquez
Philip IV
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Velázquez's position at the court gave him access to the royal
collections, rich in paintings by the Venetian Renaissance master Titian
(c. 1490–1576), who was to have more influence than any other artist on
the development of his style. The full-length portraits of Philip IV (c.
1626) and his brother the Infante Don Carlos (c. 1626) are in the
tradition of Spanish royal portraits established by Titian and are to
some extent influenced by his style. In these portraits the detailed
description and tenebrism of Velázquez's Sevillian paintings have been
modified; only the faces and hands are accentuated and the dark figures
stand out against a light background. In his later court portraits,
Velázquez was to adopt something of the more elaborate decor and richer
colouring of the Flemish Baroque master Peter Paul Rubens (1577–1640),
whom he met during the latter's second visit to the Spanish court in
1628. Pacheco tells how Rubens praised Velázquez's works very highly
because of their simplicity. Velázquez's painting of Bacchus, known as
Los Borrachos (The Topers or The Triumph of Bacchus) seems to have been
inspired by Titian and Rubens, but his realistic approach to the subject
is characteristically Spanish and one that Velázquez was to preserve
throughout his life.
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Velazquez
Juan Martinez Montanes
c. 1635
Oil on canvas, 109 x 107 cm
Museo del Prado, Madrid
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First Italian journey
Velázquez's visit, with Rubens, to see the famous paintings in the royal
monastery of the Escorial near Madrid is said by Palomino to have
aroused his desire to go to Italy. Having obtained leave and two years'
salary from the king and money and letters of recommendation from
Olivares, he sailed from Barcelona to Genoa in August 1629. In letters
from Italian ambassadors in Madrid he is referred to as a young portrait
painter, favourite of the king and Olivares, who was going to Italy to
study and to improve his painting. The visit did in fact have an
important effect on his artistic evolution. He stopped in Venice, where
Palomino says he made drawings after Tintoretto (1518–94), the master of
late 16th-century Venetian painting, and then hurried on to Rome.
Pacheco relates that he was given rooms in the Vatican palace, which he
found very isolated. Having obtained permission to return to the Vatican
to make drawings after Michelangelo's Last Judgment and the paintings of
Raphael, he moved to the Villa Medici, which was “high and airy” and had
“antique sculptures to copy.” An attack of fever obliged him later to
move nearer to the Spanish ambassador. After a year in Rome he returned
to Spain, stopping on the way in Naples; he arrived back in Madrid early
in 1631.
None of Velázquez's Italian drawings appear to have survived. Of the few
paintings that he made in Italy, a “famous portrait of himself” painted
in Rome, mentioned by Pacheco, is possibly the “self-portrait” known
only in replicas. The chief works of his Italian visit are the two
“celebrated pictures” painted in Rome, which Palomino records he took
back to Spain and offered to the king: Joseph's Bloody Coat Brought to
Jacob and The Forge of Vulcan. These two monumental figure compositions
are far removed from the limited realism in which he had been trained.
As a result of his Italian studies, particularly of Venetian painting,
his development in the treatment of space, perspective, light, and
colour and his broader technique mark the beginning of a new phase in
his lifelong pursuit of the truthful rendering of visual appearance.
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Velazquez
Portrait of a Little Girl
1640
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Middle years
After his return from Italy, Velázquez entered upon the most productive
period of his career. He took up again his chief office of portrait
painter and was occasionally called on to represent mythological
subjects for the decoration of the royal apartments. From now on his
religious works are rare and individual. The devotional quality of his
early Sevillian paintings finds moving expression in the Christ on the
Cross, a composition of monumental simplicity and naturalness. In The
Coronation of the Virgin the solemnity and dignity of the holy persons
are set off by their voluminous, colourful robes in a composition of
exceptional splendour specially fitting for a painting of the Queen of
Heaven made to adorn the oratory of the queen of Spain.
For the decoration of the throne room of the new Buen Retiro palace,
completed in 1635, Velázquez painted a series of royal equestrian
portraits, following a tradition that goes back in Spain to Titian's
portrait of Charles V at Mühlberg (1548) and was continued by Rubens.
Velázquez's equestrian groups have a balance and poise closer to
Titian's than to Rubens's Baroque compositions, and after his return
from Italy, he achieved a three-dimensional effect without detailed
drawing or strong contrasts of light and shade but with a broad
technique of brushwork and natural outdoor lighting. The Surrender of
Breda , Velázquez's famous contribution to the series of military
triumphs painted for the same throne room, is his only surviving
historical subject. Though the elaborate composition was based on a
pictorial formula of Rubens, he creates a vivid impression of actuality
and of human drama by means of accurate topographical details and the
lifelike portraiture of the principal figures.
Though Velázquez frequently followed traditional compositions,
particularly for his royal portraits, it was from no lack of ability to
compose or invent. With his portraits of Philip IV (c. 1635), the
Infante Fernando (c. 1632–35), and Prince Baltasar Carlos as huntsman,
painted for the king's new hunting lodge, the Torre de la Parada, he
created a new type of informal royal portrait. For the same place he
painted hunting scenes of which Philip IV Hunting Wild Boar is possibly
an example, and some classical subjects, including probably the portrait
like figures of Aesop and Menippus (1639–40). The portraits of court
dwarfs, painted during the next few years, display the same impartial
and discerning eye as those of royal and noble sitters, while the
character of the dwarfs' deformities is revealed through their awkward,
unconventional poses, their individual expressions, and by the
exceptionally free and bold brushwork. The Lady with a Fan, one of the
few informal portraits of women, is, on the other hand, remarkable for
the subtle and delicate painting and for the sensitive portrayal of
personal charm.
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Velazquez
The Needlewoman
c. 1640
Oil on canvas, 74 x 60 cm
National Gallery of Art, Washington
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Second Italian journey
At the beginning of 1649 Velázquez left Spain on a second visit to
Italy. This time he was on official business as gentleman of the
bedchamber. He was given a carriage for pictures, possibly gifts from
Philip IV to Pope Innocent X. The chief purpose of the journey was to
buy paintings and antiques for the king for the decoration of new
apartments in the royal palace and also to engage fresco painters to
decorate the ceilings of the apartments and to reintroduce fresco
painting into Spain. Again Velázquez found fresh inspiration in Italy,
particularly from Titian. First he went to Venice, where he bought
paintings by Titian, Tintoretto, and Veronese. He then went on to Modena,
where he saw the famous ducal collection, which included his own
portrait of the duke of Modena, painted in Madrid in 1638. According to
Palomino, he stopped in many other cities, including Bologna, where he
contracted fresco painters to work in Madrid. Palomino recounts that
Velázquez was befriended in Rome by eminent prelates and artists,
including the French painter Nicolas Poussin (1594–1665) and Gian
Lorenzo Bernini (1598–1680), the leading Italian sculptor of the Baroque
style. He gives a list of the antiques selected by Velázquez, from which
it seems that he followed the tradition of great collectors since the
16th century: rather than inferior originals he chose casts of the most
famous statues in Rome. “Without neglecting his other business he also
did many paintings,” in addition to the portrait of Innocent X. Palomino
relates that before portraying the pope, as an exercise in painting a
head from life, Velázquez made the portrait of his mulatto slave, Juan
de Pareja (freed by Velázquez in 1650). This is an exceptional
unofficial portrait, unusually boldly painted, which creates a powerful
effect of familiar and living likeness. In 1970 the sum of $5,544,000
was paid for this picture—at the time the highest price paid for a work
of art at auction.
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Velazquez
Portrait of Philip IV (fragment)
1657-60
Oil on canvas, 40,5 X 32,5 cm
Museo de Bellas Artes, Bilbao |
For the portrait of Innocent X, one of his most important official
works, Velázquez followed a tradition for papal portraits created by
Raphael in the likeness of Julius II (c. 1511–12) and later used by
Titian in portraying Paul III and His Grandsons Ottavio and Cardinal
Alessandro Farnese (1546). The powerful head, the brilliant combinations
of crimson of the curtain, the chair, and the cope are painted with
fluent technique and almost imperceptible brushstrokes that go far
beyond the late manner of Titian and announce the last stage in
Velázquez's development in the direction of Impressionism. This
portrait, which has long been Velázquez's most famous painting outside
Spain, was copied innumerable times and won him immediate and lasting
renown in Italy. In 1650 he was made a member of the Accademia di San
Luca and of the Congregazione dei Virtuosi al Pantheon, Rome's two most
prestigious organizations of artists. The portrait earned for him the
pope's support for his application for membership of the most exclusive
Spanish military order, though the difficulties arising from the fact
that he was not of noble birth were so great that he did not receive the
habit of the Order of Santiago until 1659.
The two small views of the Villa Medici, where Velázquez stayed during
his first visit to Rome, must, for stylistic reasons, have been painted
during his second visit. They are unique examples of pure landscape in
his surviving work and among those of his achievements that foreshadow
19th-century Impressionism. The so-called Rokeby Venus was also probably
painted in Italy and is one of the few representations of the female
nude in Spanish painting before the 19th century. The theme of the
toilet of Venus, therich colouring and warm flesh tones, are inspired
mainly by Titian and other Venetian painters. But Velázquez has
characteristically made no attempt to disguise or idealize his model,
and his superbly painted Venus is exceptional for his time as a lifelike
portrayal of a living nude woman.
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Velazquez
Portrait of a Man
c. 1649
Oil on canvas, 76 x 64,5 cm
Wellington Museum, London
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Last years
Velázquez returned to Madrid in the summer of 1651 with some of his
purchases and was warmly welcomed by the king who, in the following
year, appointed him chamberlain of the palace, an office that entailed
the arrangement of the royal apartments and of the king's journeys.
During his absence Philip had remarried, and the young queen Mariana of
Austria with her children provided new subjects for him to portray. For
his portraits of the queen (1652–53) and of the king's oldest daughter,
the Infanta María Teresa (1652/53), he used similar compositional
formulas, and numerous studio replicas of them were made. The royal
ladies appear as doll-like figures with their enormous coiffures and
farthingale hoops. The effect of form, texture, and ornament is achieved
in Velázquez's late manner without any definition of detail, in a free,
“sketchy” technique. The portraits of the young Infanta Margarita (1659)
and Prince Felipe Próspero, similar in composition and manner, are among
the most colourful of his works, and he most sensitively reveals the
childlike character of his sitters behind the facade of royal dignity.
Velázquez's late bust portraits of Philip IV (c. 1654 and c. 1656), of
which many studio versions exist, are very different in character and
are exceptional as royal portraits for their informal appearance. These
last close-up views of the sad and aging monarch are among the most
intimate of all Velázquez's royal characterizations.
In addition to his many official portraits, Velázquez painted during his
last years two of his most original figure compositions and greatest
masterpieces. Las Hilanderas, a genre scene in a tapestry factory, is at
the same time an illustration of the ancient Greek fable of the spinning
contest between Pallas Athena and Arachne. Here, the mythological
subject—like the religious scene in some of the early bodegones—is in
the background. But in this late work there is no barrier between the
world of myth and reality; they are united in an ingenious composition
by formal and aerial perspective. In Las Meninas (“The Maids of Honour”),
also known as The Royal Family, he has created the effect of a momentary
glance at a casual scene in the artist's studio while he is painting the
king and queen—whose reflection only is seen in the mirror in the
background—in the presence of the Infanta Margarita with her meninas and
other attendants. In this complex composition, the nearly life-size
figures are painted in more or less detail according to their relation
to the central figure of the infanta and to the source of light,
creating a remarkable illusion of reality never surpassed by Velázquez
or any other artist of his age.
Velázquez's last activity was to accompany the king and court to the
French border, in the spring of 1660, to arrange the decoration of the
Spanish pavilion for the marriage of the Infanta María Teresa with Louis
XIV. Shortly after his return to Madrid, he fell ill, and he died on
August 6. Velázquez left few pupils or immediate followers. His European
fame dates from the beginning of the 19th century. Many of his early
Sevillian paintings were acquired then by foreign (chiefly English)
collectors. Most of his later official works were incorporated in the
Prado Museum, in Madrid.
Enriqueta Harris-Frankfort
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Velazquez
View of Zaragoza
1647
Oil on canvas, 181 x 331 cm
Museo del Prado, Madrid
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EXPLORATION:
Velazquez
("The Face
of Spain"
by
Norbert Wolf)
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