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NORTHERN EUROPE IN THE 17TH CENTURY
17th century was a time of widespread unrest and warfare
The Thirty Years’ War (1618-1648) -> conflict between militant Catholics and militant Protestants -> conflict between the Bourbon dynasty of France and the Habsburg dynasties of Spain the Holy Roman Empire
Treaty of Westphalia in 1648 ends the last war of religion -> resulted in the political restructuring of Europe
EUROPE IN THE 17TH CENTURY
Heightened economic competition in Europe
MERCANTILISM
Changes in financial systems, lifestyles, and trading patterns plus expanding colonialism = creation of a worldwide marketplace
Dutch found the Bank of Amsterdam in 1609 -> transfer banking -> more complex trading practices
Increasing array of products available -> coffee, tea, sugar, tobacco, rice
Slave trade and plantation agriculture
International trade changes the face of Europe -> increase disposable income of the newly wealthy = new sources of patronage
FLANDERS AND FLEMISH BAROQUE PAINTING
In 16th century Protestants in northern provinces of the Netherlands broke away from Spain-> establish the Dutch Republic
Southern provinces that remained loyal to Spain and retained Catholicism as their official religion became the Spanish Netherlands or Flanders (more or less modern-day Belgium)
Flemish Baroque painters retained close connections to the Baroque art of Catholic Europe
PETER PAUL RUBENS
Peter Paul Rubens -> by completing the fusion of the realistic tradition of Flemish painting with the imaginative freedom and classical themes of Italian Renaissance painting, he fundamentally revitalized and redirected northern European painting
A diplomat, artist, consort of kings, and man of the world; Rubens was the most financially successful artist of his time.
ELEVATION OF THE CROSS
PETER PAUL RUBENS, Elevation of the Cross, Antwerp Cathedral, Antwerp, Belgium, 1610. Oil on panel, 15’ 1 7/8” x 11’ 1 1/2” (center panel), 15' 1 7/8" x 4' 11" (each wing)
Triptych acts as one continuous space across three panels
The Flemish painter Peter Paul Rubens synthesized in his art a variety of mostly Italian influences to create an international Baroque style. His various influences are evident in the Elevation of the Cross painted for Antwerp Cathedral
Dynamic diagonals direct viewer’s attention to Christ
strong modeling in dark and light, and anatomically powerful figures involved in violent action creates a scene of intense physical and emotional drama
MARIE DE MEDICI PETER PAUL RUBENS, Arrival of Marie de’ Medici
at Marseilles, 1622–1625. Oil on canvas, approx. 5’ 1” x 3’ 9 1/2” -> one of 21 paintings celebrating the wife of King Henry IV -> hung in the queen’s new Paris Palace
Marie arrives in France after a sea voyage guarded by Neptune and sea nymphs; France falls to her feet to greet her; angel with two trumpets heralds her arrival; Marie in silver is almost lost in the welcoming crowd
Heroic gestures, demonstrative spiraling figures
Mellow intensity inspired by Titian and Caraggio
Sumptuous full fleshed women
Splendid costumes suggest opulent theatrical production
The rich, decorative splendor of Rubens's painting of the Arrival of Marie de' Medici at Marseilles is enlivened by the inclusion of allegorical personifications and mythological figures
CONSEQUENCES OF WAR
PETER PAUL RUBENS, Allegory of the Outbreak of War, 1638. Oil on canvas, 6’ 9” x 11’ 3 7/8”
Mars with his shield & bloodstained sword, threatening all peoples with disaster pays little attention to Venus, who tries in vain to hold him back with caresses and embraces
ANTHONY VAN DYCK Anthony van Dyck. Self-Portrait.
1620-1621. Oil on canvas
Anthony van Dyck is one of the greatest Flemish painters. A student of Rubens, he spent most of his career working for the English court. In his court portraits Van Dyck established a style of characterization that was to persist all over the Europe for more than two centuries: in his visions of tall and aloof, yet relaxed, elegance, he showed the most subtle ability to bring a precise physical likeness into compositions of fluent and elaborate Baroque splendor. He was in particular a stimulus to English painters, such as Gainsborough, Reynolds and Lawrence.
ANTHONY VAN DYCK
ANTHONY VAN DYCK, Charles I Dismounted, ca. 1635. Oil on canvas, approx. 9’ x 7’
Charles I of England walking before his bowing horse
Image of royalty at ease in natural setting
Engages the viewer with a direct look, haughty pose
Charles’s shortness minimized by his relationship to the figures around him
Venetian landscape
CLARA PEETERS CLARA PEETERS, Still Life with
Flowers, Goblet, Dried Fruit, and Pretzels, 1611. Oil on panel, 1’ 7 3/4” x 2’ 1 1/4”
A pioneer of still-life painting was the Flemish artist Clara Peeters
STILL-LIFE = inanimate objects artfully arranged
Peeters won renown for her depictions of food and flowers together