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Diego Velázquez |
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. 2. Biography
1. Diego Rodriguez de Silva y Velázquez was born in 1599 in
Seville, the first child of Juan Rodriguez de Silva and Jeronima
Velázquez, members of the lesser nobility.
Almost nothing is known about Diego’s siblings – five
brothers and a sister. Velázquez seems to have started his
apprenticeship with Francisco de Herrera the Elder (c.1590-1654), but a
short while later (in 1611) his father put him with Francisco Pacheco
(1564-1644), who was an artist of modest talent, but a tolerant teacher
and a man of society. Francisco Pacheco had good contacts in the royal
court and besides, intellectuals of the city, poets, scholars, and
artists, liked to meet at his workshop to discuss the subjects of
classical antiquity, Raphael, Michelangelo and above all Titian, as well
as the theory of art. At this time, Velazquez became familiar with the
school of Caravaggio.
In 1617, Velázquez was accepted into the painters’ guild
of St. Luke in Seville. Membership in this guild was necessary before he
could start his own workshop, employ assistants, and receive commissions
from churches and public institutions. The same year Velázquez married
Juana, daughter of his teacher Pacheco. Within less than three years
they had two daughters, of whom only one, Francisca, survived. The
paintings executed by Velázquez in Seville before 1622 include bodegones
(very popular genre of kitchen or tavern scenes, in which food and drink
plays the main part) and his first portraits and religious compositions:
Old Woman Frying Eggs, Three Men at Table, The Waterseller in Seville,
Mother Jerónima de la Fuente, The Adoration of the Magi. In The
Adoration of the Magi the main characters are thought to be portraits:
the young king is a self-portrait of the artist, the kneeling king
behind him – Pacheco, and Baby Jesus and the Virgin Mary – Pacheco’s
daughter and Velázquez’ wife, Juana.
In 1622, Velázquez visited Madrid for the first time to
see its art treasures, and to make useful contacts; then he went to
Toledo to see works by El Greco and other painters of that city,
including Pedro de Orrente (1580-1645) and Juan Sanchez Cotan
(1561-1627). In the spring of 1623, Velázquez was summoned to court by
the powerful Prime Minister, Count-Duke of Olivares, and received his
first commission for a portrait of Philip IV. The success of this
picture brought the artist an appointment as court painter and the
privilege of becoming the only artist permitted to paint the king in the
future. In 1628, Peter Paul Rubens came to the court in Madrid on
diplomatic business. Velázquez often visited him at work. Actually he
was the only Spanish painter to be honored with these personal
conversations. It was Rubens who persuaded Velázquez to go to Italy.
During his first journey to Italy in 1629-30, Velázquez visited Genoa,
Venice (where he saw the work of Titian, who effected him more strongly
than any other artist), Florence, and Rome, where he stayed for almost a
year. He copied old masters, but also painted large compositions of his
own including The Forge of Vulcan and Joseph’s Bloody Coat Brought to
Jacob.
In 1834-35, Velázquez was working on the decoration of
the new palace of Buen Retino. One of his major works intended for this
setting, together with several equestrian portraits, is The Surrender of
Breda, part of a cycle of twelve battle pictures by different painters.
The besieged fortress town of Breda in North Brabant surrendered to the
Spanish general Spinola after a staunch resistance of 12 months. The
victorious general had granted honorable terms to the captured garrison.
The ceremony of the delivery of the keys is the subject of Velasquez’s
painting. The work was soon popularly renamed The Lances, because of the
verticals which seemed to express the peaceful halt of the army at the
moment of surrender. It has been considered the best historical work in
West European painting.
In 1636, the king appointed his court painter “Assistant
to the Wardrobe” (without the corresponding salary); in 1643 the king
promoted Velázquez to the post of Chamberlain of his private chambers (although
still without a regular salary), later he was made assistant to the
superintendent of special building projects. In the next few years
Velázquez’ art approached its peak in such pictures as
Venus at her
Mirror and The Fable of Arachne.
During his second visit to Rome (1649-1651) Velázquez, among other
pictures, painted the famous portrait of Pope Innocent X, which the pope
himself declared to be ‘too truthful’. On his return to Madrid he was
appointed Supreme court marshal, his obligations not connected with
painting increased, but he was able now to enlarge his workshop,
employing many assistants and pupils (none of whom, however, were of
very great artistic merit).
Velasquez’s career ended with his most significant work Las Meninas. The
painting is a multiple portrait of the royal family and court. The
principal figure with all the power of her mischievous charm, is the
little Infanta Margarita, who has burst into Velasquez’s studio,
followed by her ladies, dwarfs and dogs, in a flurry of skirts, cloaks
and ribbons, while he was intent on painting the king and queen, whose
only images are visible, reflected in the mirror hanging on the wall in
the background, where two large mythological paintings, one by Rubens,
the other by Jordaens, are also hanging.
The great master died in the palace in Madrid on August 6, 1660.
Source
ABC Gallery
2. Biography
Diego Rodríguez de Silva y Velázquez (June 6, 1599 –
August 6, 1660), commonly referred to as Diego Velázquez, was a Spanish
painter, the leading artist in the court of King Philip IV. He was an
individualistic artist of the contemporary baroque period, important as
a portrait artist. He lived in Italy for a year and a half from 1629 to
1631 with the purpose of traveling and studying works of art. In 1649 he
traveled to Italy again. In addition to numerous renditions of scenes of
historical and cultural significance, he created scores of portraits of
the Spanish royal family, other notable European figures, and commoners,
culminating in the production of his masterpiece, Las Meninas (1656).
From the first quarter of the nineteenth century, Velázquez's artwork
was a model for the realist and impressionist painters, in particular
Édouard Manet. Since that time, more modern artists, including Spain's
Pablo Picasso and Salvador Dalí, have paid tribute to Velázquez by
recreating several of his most famous works.
Early life
Born in Seville, Andalusia early on June 6, 1599, and baptized on June
6, Velázquez was the son of Juan Rodríguez de Silva, a doctor of
Portuguese descent, and Jerónima Velázquez, a member of hidalgo class,
an order of minor aristocracy (it was a Spanish custom, in order to
maintain a legacy of maternal inheritance, for the eldest male to adopt
the name of his mother). Recent archival investigations carried out by
Mendez, Ingram and others not only reject his aristocratic origins but
have brought to light that he belonged to the Jewish converso lineage.[
He was educated by his parents to fear God and, intended for a learned
profession, received good training in languages and philosophy. But he
showed an early gift for art; consequently, he began to study under
Francisco de Herrera, a vigorous painter who disregarded the Italian
influence of the early Seville school. Velázquez remained with him for
one year. It was probably from Herrera that he learned to use brushes
with long bristes.
After leaving Herrera's studio when he was 12 years old, Velázquez began
to serve as an apprentice under Francisco Pacheco, an artist and teacher
in Seville. Though considered a generally dull, commonplace painter,
Pacheco sometimes expressed a simple, direct realism in contradiction to
the style of Raphael that he was taught. Velázquez remained in Pacheco's
school for five years, studying proportion and perspective and
witnessing the trends in the literary and artistic circles of Seville.
To Madrid (early period)
By the early 1620s his position and reputation were assured in Seville;
Velázquez's wife, Juana Pacheco (daughter of Francisco Pacheco), in
these years bore him two daughters—his only known family. The younger,
Ignacia, died in infancy, while the elder, Francisca, in due time
married Juan Bautista Martinez del Mazo, a painter. Velázquez produced
other notable works in this time. Sacred subjects are depicted in
Adoración de los Reyes (1619, English: The Adoration of the Magi), and
Jesús y los peregrinos de Emaús (1626, English: Christ and the Pilgrims
of Emmaus), both of which begin to express his more pointed and careful
realism.
Madrid and Philip IV
Velázquez went to Madrid in the first half of April 1622, with letters
of introduction to Don Juan de Fonseca, himself from Seville, who was
chaplain to the King. At the request of Pacheco, Velázquez painted the
portrait of the famous poet Luis de Góngora y Argote. Velázquez painted
Góngora crowned with a laurel wreath, but at some unknown later date
painted over it. It is possible that Velázquez stopped in Toledo on his
way from Seville, on the advice of Pacheco, or back from Madrid on that
of Góngora, a great admirer of El Greco, having composed a poem on the
occasion of his death.
In December 1622, Rodrigo de Villandrando, the King's favorite court
painter, died. Don Juan de Fonseca conveyed to Velázquez the command to
come to the Court from the Count-Duke of Olivares, the powerful minister
of Philip IV. He was offered 50 ducats (175 g of gold—worth about €2000
in 2005) to defray his expenses, and he was accompanied by his
father-in-law. Fonseca lodged the young painter at his own home and sat
for a portrait himself, which, when completed, was conveyed to the Royal
palace. A portrait of the King was commissioned. On August 16, 1623, the
King sat for Velázquez. Complete in one day the portrait was likely to
have been no more than a head sketch, but both the King and Olivares
were pleased. Olivares commanded Velázquez to move his home to Madrid,
promising that no other painter would ever paint the King's portrait and
all other portraits of the King would be withdrawn from circulation. In
the following year, 1624, he received 300 ducats from the king to pay
the cost of moving his family to Madrid, which became his home for the
remainder of his life.
Through an equestrian portrait of the king, painted in 1623, Velázquez
secured admission to the royal service with a salary of 20 ducats per
month, besides medical attendance, lodgings and payment for the pictures
he might paint. The portrait was exhibited on the steps of San Felipe
and was received with enthusiasm. It is now lost. The Museo del Prado,
however, has two of Velázquez's portraits of the king (nos. 1070 and
1071) in which the severity of the Seville period has disappeared and
the tones are more delicate. The modeling is firm, recalling that of
Antonio Mor (Anthonis Mor), the Netherlandish portrait painter of Philip
II, who exercised a considerable influence on the Spanish school. In the
same year the Prince of Wales (afterwards Charles I) arrived at the
court of Spain. Records indicate that he sat for Velázquez, but the
picture is now lost.
In September 1628 Peter Paul Rubens came to Madrid as an emissary from
the Infanta Isabella, and Velázquez kept his company among the Titians
at the Escorial. Rubens was then at the height of his powers. The seven
months of the diplomatic mission showed Rubens' brilliance as painter
and courtier. Rubens had a high opinion of Velázquez, but he effected no
great change in his painting. He reinforced Velázquez's desire to see
Italy and the works of the great Italian masters.
In 1627, Philip set a competition for the best painters of Spain the
subject of the expulsion of the Moors. Velázquez won. His picture was
destroyed in a fire at the palace in 1734. Recorded descriptions of it
say that it depicted Philip III pointing with his baton to a crowd of
men and women driven off under charge of soldiers, while the female
personification of Spain sits in calm repose. Velázquez was appointed
gentleman usher as reward. Later he also received a daily allowance of
12 réis, the same amount allotted to the court barbers, and 90 ducats a
year for dress. Five years after he painted it, as an extra payment he
received 100 ducats for the picture of Bacchus (The Feast of Bacchus),
painted in 1629. The spirit and aim of this work are better understood
from its Spanish name, Los borrachos or Los bebedores (the tipplers),
who are paying mock homage to a half-naked ivy-crowned young man seated
on a wine barrel. The painting is firm and solid, and the light and
shade are more deftly handled than in former works. Altogether, this
production may be taken as the most advanced example of the first style
of Velázquez.
Italian period
In 1629 he went to live in Italy for a year and a half. Though his first
Italian visit is recognized as a crucial chapter in the development of
Velázquez's style - and in the history of Spanish Royal Patronage, since
Philip IV sponsored his trip - we know rather little about the details
and specifics: what the painter saw, whom he met, how he was perceived
and what innovations he hoped to introduce into his painting. It is
canonical to divide the artistic career of Velázquez by his two visits
to Italy, with his second grouping of works following the first visit
and his third grouping following the second visit. This somewhat
arbitrary division may be accepted though it will not always apply,
because, as is usual in the case of many painters, his styles at times
overlap each other. Velázquez rarely signed his pictures, and the royal
archives give the dates of only his most important works. Internal
evidence and history pertaining to his portraits supply the rest to a
certain extent.
Return to Madrid (middle period)
Velázquez then painted the first of many portraits of the young prince
and heir to the Spanish throne, Don Baltasar Carlos, looking dignified
and lordly even in his childhood, in the dress of a field marshal on his
prancing steed. The scene is in the riding school of the palace, the
king and queen looking on from a balcony, while Olivares attends as
master of the horse to the prince. Don Baltasar died in 1646 at the age
of seventeen, so, judging by his age in the portrait, it must have been
painted in about 1641.
The powerful minister Olivares was the early and constant patron of the
painter. His impassive, saturnine face is familiar to us from the many
portraits painted by Velázquez. Two are notable; one is a full-length,
stately and dignified, in which he wears the green cross of the order of
Alcantara and holds a wand, the badge of his office as master of the
horse, the other, a great equestrian portrait in which he is
flatteringly represented as a field marshal during action. In these
portraits, Velázquez has well repaid the debt of gratitude that he owed
to his first patron, whom Velázquez stood by during Olivares's fall from
power, thus exposing himself to the great risk of the anger of the
jealous Philip. The king, however, showed no sign of malice towards his
favorite painter.
The sculptor Montafles modeled a statue of one of Velázquez's equestrian
portraits of the king, painted in 1636, which was cast in bronze by the
Florentine sculptor Tacca and which now stands in the Plaza de Oriente
at Madrid. The original of this portrait no longer exists, but several
others do. Velázquez, in this and in all his portraits of the king,
depicts Philip wearing the golilla, a stiff linen collar projecting at
right angles from the neck. It was invented by the king, who was so
proud of it that he celebrated it by a festival followed by a procession
to the church to thank God for the blessing. Thus, the golilla was the
height of fashion, and appeared in most of the male portraits of the
period.
Velázquez was in constant and close attendance on Philip, accompanying
him in his journeys to Aragon in 1642 and 1644, and was doubtless
present with him when he entered Lerida as a conqueror. It was then that
he painted a great equestrian portrait in which the king is represented
as a great commander leading his troops—a role which Philip never played
except in pageantry. All is full of animation except the stolid face of
the king. It hangs as a pendant to the great Olivares portrait—fit
rivals of the neighboring Charles V by Titian, which inspired Velázquez
to excel himself, and both remarkable for their silvery tone and their
feeling of open air.
Portraiture
Besides the forty portraits of Philip by Velázquez, he painted portraits
of other members of the royal family: Philip's first wife, Isabella of
Bourbon, and her children, especially her eldest son, Don Baltasar
Carlos, of whom there is a beautiful full-length in a private room at
Buckingham Palace. Cavaliers, soldiers, churchmen and poets of the
court, as, for example, Francisco de Quevedo at Apsley House, sat to the
painter and, even if forgotten by history, will live on his canvas.
One wonders who the beautiful woman can be who adorns the Wallace
collection, a brunette so unlike the usual fair-haired female sitters to
Velázquez. This picture is one of the ornaments of the Wallace
collection. However, if few ladies of the court of Philip have been
depicted, Velázquez painted several of his buffoons and dwarfs.
Velázquez appears to represent them with respect and sympathetically, as
in El Primo (1644, English: The Favorite), whose intelligent face and
huge folio with ink-bottle and pen by his side show him to be a wiser
and better-educated man than many of the gallants of the court. Pablo de
Valladolid (1635, English: Paul of Valladolid), a buffoon evidently
acting a part, and El Bobo de Coria (1639, English: The Buffoon of
Coria) belong to this middle period.
The greatest of the religious paintings by Velázquez also belongs to
this middle period, the Cristo Crucificado (1632, English: Christ on the
Cross). It is a work of tremendous originality, depicting Christ
immediately after death. The Savior's head hangs on his breast and a
mass of dark tangled hair conceals part of the face. The figure stands
alone. The picture was lengthened to suit its place in an oratory, but
this addition has since been removed. Some believe that the man in this
painting is his uncle.
Velázquez's son-in-law Juan Bautista Martinez del Mazo had succeeded him
as usher in 1634, and Mazo himself had received a steady promotion in
the royal household. Mazo received a pension of 500 ducats in 1640,
increased to 700 in 1648, for portraits painted and to be painted, and
was appointed inspector of works in the palace in 1647.
Philip now entrusted Velázquez with carrying out a design on which he
had long set his heart: the founding of an academy of art in Spain. Rich
in pictures, Spain was weak in statuary, and Velázquez was commissioned
once again to proceed to Italy to make purchases.
Second Visit to Italy
Accompanied by his manservant Pareja, whom he trained in painting,
Velázquez sailed from Málaga in 1649, landing at Genoa, and proceeded
from Milan to Venice, buying paintings of Titian, Tintoretto and
Veronese as he went. At Modena he was received with much favor by the
duke, and here he painted the portrait of the duke at the Modena gallery
and two portraits that now adorn the Dresden gallery, for these
paintings came from the Modena sale of 1746.
Those works presage the advent of the painter's third and latest manner,
a noble example of which is the great portrait of Pope Innocent X in the
Doria Pamphilj Gallery in Rome, where Velázquez now proceeded. There he
was received with marked favor by the Pope, who presented him with a
medal and golden chain. Velázquez took a copy of the portrait—which Sir
Joshua Reynolds thought was the finest picture in Rome—with him to
Spain. Several copies of it exist in different galleries, some of them
possibly studies for the original or replicas painted for Philip.
Velázquez, in this work, had now reached the manera abreviada, a term
coined by contemporary Spaniards for this bolder, sharper style. The
portrait shows such ruthlessness in Innocent's expression that some in
the Vatican feared that Velázquez would meet with the Pope's
displeasure, but Innocent was well pleased with the work, hanging it in
his official visitor's waiting room.
In 1650 in Rome Velázquez also painted a portrait of his servant, Juan
de Pareja, now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. This
portrait procured his election into the Academy of St. Luke. Purportedly
Velázquez created this portrait as a warm-up of his skills before his
portrait of the Pope. It captures in great detail Pareja's countenance
and his somewhat worn and patched clothing with an impressive economy of
brushwork; it is one of his best known pieces of portraiture.
Return to Spain (later period)
King Philip wished that Velázquez return to Spain; accordingly, after a
visit to Naples, where he saw his old friend José Ribera, he returned to
Spain via Barcelona in 1651, taking with him many pictures and 300
pieces of statuary, which afterwards were arranged and cataloged for the
king. Undraped sculpture was, however, abhorrent to the Spanish Church,
and after Philip's death these works gradually disappeared. Isabella of
Bourbon had died in 1644, and the king had married Marie-Anne of
Austria, whom Velázquez now painted in many attitudes. He was specially
chosen by the king to fill the high office of aposentador mayor, which
imposed on him the duty of looking after the quarters occupied by the
court—a responsible function which was no sinecure and one which
interfered with the exercise of his art. Yet far from indicating any
decline, his works of this period are amongst the highest examples of
his style.
Las Meninas
One of the infantas, Margarita, the eldest daughter of the new Queen,
appears to be subject of Las Meninas (1656, English: The Maids of
Honor), Velázquez's magnum opus. However, in looking at the various
viewpoints of the painting it is unclear as to who, or what is the true
subject. Is it the royal daughter, or perhaps the painter himself? The
answer may lie in the image on the back wall, depicting the King and
Queen. Is this image a mirror, in which case the King and Queen are
standing where we stand? Are they the subject of Valesquez's work? Or is
the work simply a court painting? Much is still in speculation about the
true subject of this masterpiece, and many of the questions that we ask
may never be truly answered.
Created four years before his death, it is a staple of the European
baroque period of art. An apotheosis of the work has been effected since
its creation; Luca Giordano, a contemporary Italian painter, referred to
it as the "theology of painting," and the eighteenth century Englishman
Thomas Lawrence cited it as the "philosophy of art," so decidedly
capable of producing its desired effect. That effect has been variously
interpreted; Dale Brown points out an interpretation that, in inserting
within the work a faded portrait of the king and queen hanging on the
back wall, Velázquez has ingeniously prognosticated the fall of the
Spanish empire that was to gain momentum following his death. Another
interpretation is that the portrait is in fact a mirror, and that the
painting itself is in the perspective of the King and Queen, hence their
reflection can be seen in the mirror on the back wall.
It is said the king painted the honorary Cruz Roja (Red Cross) of the
Orden de Santiago (Order of Santiago) on the breast of the painter as it
appears today on the canvas. However, Velázquez did not receive this
honor of knighthood until three years after execution of this painting.
Even the King of Spain could not make his favorite a belted knight
without the consent of the commission established to inquire into the
purity of his lineage. This aim of these inquiries would be to prevent
the appointment to positions of anyone found to have even a taint of
heresy in their lineage—that is, a trace of Jewish or Moorish blood or
contamination by trade or commerce in either side of the family for many
generations. The records of this commission have been found among the
archives of the Order of Santiago. Velázquez was awarded the honor in
1659. His occupation as plebeian and tradesman was justified because, as
painter to the king, he was evidently not involved in the practice of
"selling" pictures.
In his book The Order of Things, philosopher Michel Foucault devotes the
entire opening chapter to a detailed analysis of Las Meninas. He
describes the ways in which the painting problematizes issues of
representation through its use of mirrors, screens, and the subsequent
oscillations that occur between the image's interior, surface, and
exterior.
In his book, "The Dying Animal", Philip Roth uses Las Meninas as a
metaphor for the distracted attraction of courtship.
Final years
Had it not been for this royal appointment, which enabled Velázquez to
escape the censorship of the Inquisition, he would not have been able to
release his La Venus del espejo (c. 1644-1648, English:
Venus at her
Mirror) also known as
The Rokeby Venus. It is the only surviving female
nude by Velázquez.
There were essentially only two patrons of art in Spain—the church and
the art-loving king and court. Bartolome Esteban Murillo was the artist
favored by the church, while Velázquez was patronized by the crown. One
difference, however, deserves to be noted. Murillo, who toiled for a
rich and powerful church, left little means to pay for his burial, while
Velázquez lived and died in the enjoyment of good salaries and pensions.
One of his final works was Las hilanderas (The Spinners), painted circa
1657, representing the interior of the royal tapestry works. It is full
of light, air and movement, featuring vibrant colors and careful
handling. Anton Raphael Mengs said this work seemed to have been painted
not by the hand but by the pure force of will. It displays a
concentration of all the art-knowledge Velázquez had gathered during his
long artistic career of more than forty years. The scheme is simple—a
confluence of varied and blended red, bluish-green, grey and black.
In 1660 a peace treaty between France and Spain was consummated by the
marriage of Maria Theresa with Louis XIV, and the ceremony took place on
the Island of Pheasants, a small swampy island in the Bidassoa.
Velázquez was charged with the decoration of the Spanish pavilion and
with the entire scenic display. He attracted much attention from the
nobility of his bearing and the splendor of his costume. On June 26 he
returned to Madrid, and on July 31 he was stricken with fever. Feeling
his end approaching, he signed his will, appointing as his sole
executors his wife and his firm friend named Fuensalida, keeper of the
royal records. He died on August 6, 1660. He was buried in the
Fuensalida vault of the church of San Juan Bautista, and within eight
days his wife Juana was buried beside him. Unfortunately, this church
was destroyed by the French in 1811, so his place of interment is now
unknown. There was much difficulty in adjusting the tangled accounts
outstanding between Velázquez and the treasury, and it was not until
1666, after the death of King Philip, that they were finally settled.
In modernity
Until the nineteenth century, little was known outside of Spain of
Velázquez's work. His paintings mostly escaped being stolen by the
French marshals during the Peninsular War. In 1828 Sir David Wilkie
wrote from Madrid that he felt himself in the presence of a new power in
art as he looked at the works of Velázquez, and at the same time found a
wonderful affinity between this artist and the British school of
portrait painters, especially Henry Raeburn. He was struck by the modern
impression pervading Velázquez's work in both landscape and portraiture.
Presently, his technique and individuality have earned Velázquez a
prominent position in the annals of European art, and he is often
considered a father of the Spanish school of art. Although acquainted
with all the Italian schools and a friend of the foremost painters of
his day, he was strong enough to withstand external influences and work
out for himself the development of his own nature and his own principles
of art.
Velázquez is often cited as a key influence on the art of Édouard Manet,
important when considering that Manet is often cited as the bridge
between realism and Impressionism. Calling Velázquez the "painter of
painters," Manet admired Velázquez's use of vivid brushwork in the midst
of the baroque academic style of his contemporaries and built upon
Velázquez's motifs in his own art.
Modern recreations of classics
The importance of Velázquez's art even today is evident in considering
the respect with which twentieth century painters regard his work. Pablo
Picasso presented the most durable homage to Velázquez in 1957 when he
recreated Las Meninas in his characteristically cubist form. While
Picasso was worried that if he copied Velázquez's painting, it would be
seen only as a copy and not as any sort of unique representation, he
proceeded to do so, and the enormous work—the largest he had produced
since Guernica in 1937—earned a position of relevance in the Spanish
canon of art. Picasso retained the general form and positioning of the
original in the framework of his avant-garde cubist style.
Salvador Dalí, as with Picasso in anticipation of the tercentennial of
Velázquez's death, created in 1958 a work entitled Velázquez Painting
the Infanta Margarita. The color scheme shows Dalí's serious tribute to
Velázquez; the work also functioned, as in Picasso's case, as a vehicle
for the presentation of newer theories in art and thought—nuclear
mysticism, in Dalí's case.
The Anglo-Irish painter Francis Bacon found Velázquez's portrait of Pope
Innocent X to be one of the greatest portraits ever made. He created
several expressionist variations of this piece in the 1950s; however,
Bacon's paintings presented a more gruesome image of the pope, who had
now been dead for centuries. One such famous variation, entitled Figure
with Meat (1954), shows the pope between two halves of a bisected cow.
Descendants
Velazquez' daughter was an ancestress of Marquises de Monteleon,
including Enriquetta Casado who in 1746 married Heinrich VI, Count Reuss
zu Kistritz and had large number of descendants among German
aristocracy, among them Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands, father of
Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands.
Selected works
* The Lunch (c. 1617) - Oil on canvas, 108 x 102 cm, Hermitage Museum,
St. Petersburg
* Old Woman Frying Eggs (c. 1618) - Oil on canvas, 105 × 119 cm,
National Gallery, Edinburgh
* Christ in the House of Martha and Mary (1618) - Oil on canvas, 63 x
103.5 cm, National Gallery, London
* The Adoration of the Magi (1619) - Oil on canvas, 203 × 125 cm, Museo
del Prado, Madrid
* The Waterseller of Seville (c. 1620) - Oil on canvas, 105 × 80 cm,
Apsley House, London
* Imposición de la casulla a San Ildefonso (1623) - Oil on canvas, 165 ×
115 cm, Museo de Bellas Artes, Sevilla
* Gaspar de Guzmán, Duke de Olivares (1624) - Oil on canvas, 202 x 107
cm, Museu de Arte, Sao Paulo
* El Triunfo de Baco (Los borrachos) (1628 - 1629) - Oil on canvas, 165
x 225 cm, Museo del Prado, Madrid
* La reina Isabel de Borbón a caballo (1629) - Oil on canvas, 301 x 314
cm, Museo del Prado, Madrid
* Apolo en la Fragua de Vulcano (1630) - Oil on canvas, 223 x 290 cm,
Museo del Prado, Madrid
* Cristo crucificado (1631) - Oil on canvas, 248 x 169 cm, Museo del
Prado, Madrid
* Equestrian portrait of Duke de Olivares (1634) - Oil on canvas, 313 x
239 cm, Museo del Prado, Madrid
* Surrender of Breda (1633 - 1635) - Oil on canvas, 307 × 367 cm, Museo
del Prado, Madrid
* Portrait of Duke de Olivares (1635) - Oil on canvas, 67 × 54.5 cm,
Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg
* Menipo (1639 - 1640) - Oil on canvas, 179 × 94 cm, Museo del Prado,
Madrid
* Esopo (1639 - 1640) - Oil on canvas, 179 × 94 cm, Museo del Prado,
Madrid
* Mars Resting (1640) - Oil on canvas, 179 × 95 cm, Museo del Prado,
Madrid
* The Rokeby Venus (La Venus del espejo, c. 1648-1651) - Oil on canvas,
122 × 177 cm, National Gallery, London
* Portrait of Innocent X (c. 1650) - Oil on canvas, 141 x 119 cm,
Galleria Doria Pamphilj, Rome
* Portrait of Juan de Pareja (1650) - Oil on canvas, 81.3 x 69.9 cm,
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City
* Las Meninas (1656) - Oil on canvas, 318 × 276 cm, Museo del Prado,
Madrid
* Las Hilanderas (The Fable of Arachne) (c. 1657) -Oil on canvas, 167 ×
252 cm, Museo del Prado, Madrid
* Mercury and Argus (1659) - Oil on canvas, 127 × 248 cm, Museo del
Prado, Madrid
References
1. ^ Otaka, Yasujiro: An Aspiration Sealed. [1] Retrieved on March 10,
2007.
* Brown, Johnathan (1986) Velázquez: Painter and Courtier Yale
University Press, New Haven, ISBN 0300034660 ;
* Brown, Jonathan (1978) Images and Ideas in Seventeenth-Century Spanish
Painting Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, ISBN 0691039410 ;
* Brown, Dale (1969). The World of Velázquez: 1599–1660. New York:
Time-Life Books. ISBN 0809402521.
* Calvo Serraller, Francisco (1999). Velázquez:. Madrid: Electa. ISBN
8481562033.
* Wolf, Norbert (1998) Diego Velázquez, 1599-1660 : the face of Spain
Taschen, Köln, ISBN 3822865117 ;
* "Diego Velázquez" (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica, 11th ed. London:
Cambridge University Press.
* Davies, David and Enriqueta Harris (1996) Velázquez in Seville
National Gallery of Scotland, Edinburgh, ISBN 0300069499 ;
* Enriqueta Harris resalta la 'pasión británica' por Velázquez en un
simposio en Sevilla. El Pais Digital. Retrieved on April 9, 2005.
* Erenkrantz, Justin R. "The Variations on Past Masters". The Mask and
the Mirror. Accessed on April 10, 2005.
* Goldberg, Edward L. "Velázquez in Italy: Painters, Spies and Low
Spaniards". The Art Bulletin, Vol. 74, No. 3 (Sep., 1992), pp. 453-456.
* "Velázquez, Diego" (1995). Enciclopedia Hispánica. Barcelona:
Encyclopædia Britannica Publishers. ISBN 1564090078.
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