Wednesday, July 11, 2018

Secular Paintings as Piquant Examples of 17th-century Taste

Anonymous artist
Anamorphous Portrait of King Charles II of England
ca. 1660-1700
oil on panel
Nationalmuseum, Stockholm

Catoptric Anamorphosis (also called Mirror Anamorphosis) is a distorted perspective requiring the use of a conical or cylindrical mirror to create – and subsequently to reconstitute and view – the image. The deformed image is painted on a plane surface surrounding the mirror. Only by positioning such a mirror correctly and looking into it, can the viewer perceive the image undeformed.

Willem de Poorter
Vanitas Allegory
before 1668
oil on panel
Nationalmuseum, Stockholm

Thomas Willeboirts Bosschaert and Paul de Vos
Triumphant Cupid among Emblems of Art and War
before 1654
oil on canvas
Nationalmuseum, Stockholm

Jan van Kessel
Emblems of War
before 1679
oil on copper
Nationalmuseum, Stockholm

"The allegory of the seventeenth century is not convention of expression, but expression of convention.  At the same time expression of authority, which is secret in accordance with the dignity of its origin, but public in accordance with the extent of its validity.  And the very same antinomies take plastic form in the conflict between the cold, facile technique and the eruptive expression of allegorical interpretation.  . . .  By its very essence classicism was not permitted to behold the lack of freedom, the imperfection, the collapse of the physical, beautiful, nature.  But beneath its extravagant pomp, this is precisely what baroque allegory proclaims, with unprecedented emphasis.  A deep-rooted intuition of the problematic character of art  it was by no means only the coyness of a particular social class, it was also a religious scruple which assigned artistic activity to 'leisure hours'  emerges as a reaction to its self-confidence at the time of the Renaissance."

– Walter Benjamin, from The Origin of German Tragic Drama (1928), translated by John Osborne (1977)

Gérard de Lairesse
Achilles playing the Lyre before Patroclus
ca. 1675-80
oil on canvas
Nationalmuseum, Stockholm

Jan Verkolje
Company making Music
before 1693
oil on panel
Nationalmuseum, Stockholm

Gillis van Tilborgh
Music-making Company
ca. 1655-60
oil on canvas
Nationalmuseum, Stockholm

Pieter Codde
Company making Music
before 1678
oil on panel
Nationalmuseum, Stockholm

"Social conventions have applied to both playing and listening to music, but over the years they have operated very differently.  In the 16th century musical ability was seen as an expression of good birth and good education.  Lord Herbert of Cherbury regarded playing the lute as a more civilised pastime than drunken debauchery.  The Tudor monarchs Henry VIII and Elizabeth I were both renowned for their skill, the king on the lute and the queen on the virginals.  This attitude continued into the following century.  Roger North, a gentleman architect and amateur musician writing in the 1690s, recommended the viol, violin, organ, harpsichord and double bass for men, and the spinet or harpsichord, lute and guitar for women.  However, he thought the harpsichord better for a lady's posture then the lute."

– curator's notes from the Victoria & Albert Museum

Pieter Codde
A Conversation
1628
oil on panel
Nationalmuseum, Stockholm

Gerard Seghers
Feast of the Gods in a Cave near the Sea-shore
before 1651
oil on canvas
Nationalmuseum, Stockholm

Gabriel Metsu
Card Game
ca. 1655-60
oil on panel
Nationalmuseum, Stockholm

Nicolas Regnier
Sleeper awakened by Young Woman holding a Flame
ca. 1620-25
oil on canvas
Nationalmuseum, Stockholm

Jacob Ochtervelt
The Sleeping Officer
before 1682
oil on canvas
Nationalmuseum, Stockholm

Constantin Verhout
The Sleeping Student
1663
oil on panel
Nationalmuseum, Stockholm

"A student has fallen asleep in a chair.  On the table are gloves, writing materials and books.  The focus is on the pile of books, with its intricate play of light and shadow that creates a tension in the picture.  The painting has been interpreted as conveying a moral message – about the importance of making proper use of one's time.  But when it was brought to attention in the major Rembrandt exhibition in 1992, interest in the work was also prompted by associations with a modern aesthetic – the arrangement of piled-up books recalled a stylised idiom akin to Modernism."

– curator's notes from the Nationalmuseum, Stockholm