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NORTHERN EUROPE, 1600-1700. GARDNER CHAPTER 25-1 PP. 673-679. NORTHERN EUROPE IN THE 17 TH CENTURY. 17 th century was a time of widespread unrest and warfare
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NORTHERN EUROPE,1600-1700 GARDNER CHAPTER 25-1 PP. 673-679
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