Saturday, February 2, 2019

Diego Velázquez (1599-1660) - Early Paintings (To 1630)

Diego Velázquez
The Three Musicians
ca. 1618
oil on canvas
Gemäldegalerie, Berlin

Diego Velázquez
Adoration of the Magi
1619
oil on canvas
Museo del Prado, Madrid

Diego Velázquez
Head of an Apostle
ca. 1619-20
oil on canvas
Museo del Prado, Madrid

Diego Velázquez
Portrait of painter Francisco Pacheco
ca. 1620
oil on canvas
Museo del Prado, Madrid

"Pacheco's house was a gilded cage of art, the academy and school for the greatest minds of Seville.  And thus Diego Velázquez lived contentedly, practicing incessantly his drawing, the basic elements of painting and the main gate of art.  . . .  Velázquez rivaled Caravaggio for boldness in painting and equaled Pacheco in matters philosophical.  He admired the former's taste and his keen painterly instincts, and chose the latter for master because of his erudition and experience.  He was also inspired by Italian paintings by Pomarancio, Baglione, Lanfranco, Ribera, Guido Reni and others that had been brought to Seville.  But what most excited him were the works of Luis Tristán, a painter of Toledo and disciple of El Greco, with whom he shared a lively imagination and a taste for the unusual.  For this reason he proclaimed himself a follower of Tristán and abandoned the example of his teacher Pacheco, whose manner, as Velázquez realized right from the start, was too bland and pretentious, however learned, to suit his temperament.  Velázquez was called a second Caravaggio because he always had his eye on nature and imitated it so skillfully.  For his portraits he imitated those of Dominico Greco, which, in Velázquez's opinion, could never be praised highly enough.  And how right he was, for the portraits have none of the delirium of his last works.  We can define El Greco's art by saying that what he did well none did better, and that what he did badly none did worse."

– Antonio Palomino de Castro, from El museo pictórico y escala óptica (1724), translated by Jonathan Brown in Italian and Spanish Art, 1600-1750: Sources and Documents (Northwestern University Press, 1992)

Diego Velázquez
Venerable Mother Jerónima de la Fuente
1620
oil on canvas
Museo del Prado, Madrid

Diego Velázquez
Portrait of poet Luis de Góngora y Argote
1622
oil on canvas
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Diego Velázquez
Supper at Emmaus
1622-23
oil on canvas
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Diego Velázquez
Waterseller of Seville
1623
oil on canvas
private collection

Diego Velázquez
Portrait of Juan Velázquez (possibly)
ca. 1623
oil on canvas
Museo del Prado, Madrid

Diego Velázquez
Portrait of Philip IV
1626-28
oil on canvas
Museo del Prado, Madrid

"In 1627 Peter Paul Rubens (that monstrously talented, skilled, and fortunate man) came to Spain as the Ambassador Extraordinary of the King of England in order to arrange a peace with Spain.  As Pacheco says, he had very little to do with the local painters, but he struck up a close friendship with Velázquez, with whom he had previously corresponded, and praised his works.  Together they went to The Escorial to see the famous monastery of San Lorenzo.  They took great delight in admiring its points of interest and especially the paintings by Europe's great masters.  These stimulated Velázquez's long-standing desire to go to Italy to see, contemplate and study those eminent paintings and statues that are the flaming torch of art and worthy to be imitated."

– Antonio Palomino de Castro, from El museo pictórico y escala óptica (1724), translated by Jonathan Brown in Italian and Spanish Art, 1600-1750: Sources and Documents (Northwestern University Press, 1992)

Diego Velázquez
Triumph of Bacchus
1628-29
oil on canvas
Museo del Prado, Madrid

Diego Velázquez
Portrait of a Lady
ca. 1630
oil on canvas
Gemäldegalerie, Berlin

Diego Velázquez
Vulcan's Forge
ca. 1630
oil on canvas
Museo del Prado, Madrid

Diego Velázquez
Joseph's Bloody Coat
ca. 1630
oil on canvas
Monasterio del Escorial

"Velázquez returned to Madrid after an absence of a year and a half, arriving around the beginning of the year 1631.  . . .  While he was in Rome Velázquez painted that famous picture of the brothers of Joseph who, out of envy, sold him to some Ishmaelite merchants and brought his clothes, stained with lamb's blood, to his father Jacob, who believed the boy had been killed by a wild animal.  No less famous is the other painting he did at the same time, the fable of Vulcan at the moment when Apollo brought him the news of Venus's adultery with Mars.  Here Vulcan has turned so white with alarm that he looks as if he has stopped breathing.  Velázquez brought these two pictures back to Spain and offered them to His Majesty, who received them with deserved praise and ordered them to be hung in the Palace of Buen Retiro.  Later on the painting of Joseph was moved to The Escorial and is now in the chapter room there."

– Antonio Palomino de Castro, from El museo pictórico y escala óptica (1724), translated by Jonathan Brown in Italian and Spanish Art, 1600-1750: Sources and Documents (Northwestern University Press, 1992)