Wednesday, August 22, 2018

Baroque Portraits (Some Factual, Some Imaginary)

Claude Vignon
David (Biblical Hero)
ca. 1623-25
oil on canvas
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Anonymous Flemish painter
Homer (Ancient Greek Poet)
1639
oil on panel
Walters Art Museum, Baltimore

Paulus Moreelse
Portrait of a Young Woman as the Goddess Flora
1633
oil on panel
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

"From the coalescence of the law of suggestion and the law of relation come the various nuances of process and psychology which are the property of individual painters. Most generally these imply that the artist does not know a priori what he is about. This is like the five-year-old who said she was painting a picture of God, and who, when asked how she knew what He looked like, replied, "That's why I'm painting Him." Certain impulses, certain starting points serve as clues to the inner need of the artist and only after their actual relations and actual suggestions are received can these needs be assessed. Process in painting is never employed for its own sake or for merely creating the marks of a process so much as to authenticate and to specify a capacity to feel. Whether the painting be explicitly or only tangentially representational, the artist in working imputes a certain character, a certain significance to the several elements beyond what they could "objectively" be held to possess. The subjective form, the felt sense of the data, is not simply formal or descriptive but attitudinal, associative, kinesthetic, etc.; that is, it has many levels of reference. As the various impulses are put together the unity of the work is due to the continuity through time of the self of the artist, who discloses what had not been known before."

– from the essay Painting as Painting by Louis Finkelstein, published in 1968 by the Art Museum of the University of Texas at Austin

Jacob Jordaens
Portrait of a Young Married Couple
ca. 1621-22
oil on panel
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Frans Hal-
Portrait of a Man
ca. 1665
oil on canvas
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Jean Petitot
Miniature Portrait of a Lady
ca. 1650
enamel on gold
Walters Art Museum, Baltimore

Rembrandt
Portrait of a Man wearing a Black Hat
1634
oil on panel
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Rembrandt
Portrait of a Woman wearing a Gold Chain
1634
oil on panel
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Philippe de Champaigne
Portrait of Carmelite Father Giovanni Antonio Philippini
1651
oil on canvas
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

"What we call subject-matter now, was then painting itself.  Subject matter came later on when parts of those works were taken out arbitrarily, when a man for no reason is sitting, standing or lying down.  He became a bather; she became a bather; she was reclining; he just stood there looking ahead.  That is when the posing in painting began.  When a man has no other meaning than that he is sitting, he is a poseur.  That's what happened when the burghers got hold of art, and got hold of man, too, for that matter.  For really, when you think of all the life and death problems in the art of the Renaissance, who cares if a Chevalier is laughing or that a young girl has a red blouse on."

– Willem de Kooning, from The Renaissance and Order, published in the journal Trans/formation, 1951

Nicolaes Maes
Portrait of Helena van Heuvel
ca. 1675-79
oil on canvas
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Jakob Ferdinand Voet
Portrait of Livio Odescalchi
1676-77
oil on canvas
Walters Art Museum, Baltimore

Cornelius Johnson
Portrait of a Woman
1631
oil on panel
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Cornelius Johnson
Portrait of a Man
ca. 1635-40
oil on canvas
Walters Art Museum, Baltimore

Anonymous French painter
Copy of the Mona Lisa with columns added at sides
ca. 1635-60
oil on panel
Walters Art Museum, Baltimore