:The first major retrospective ever to be devoted to the drawings
of Peter Paul Rubens in the United States is open at The
Metropolitan Museum of Art and runs until April 3. "Peter Paul
Rubens (1577-1640): The Drawings" brings together 115 of the
versatile Baroque master's finest and most representative
drawings, including dozens that have never before been on view in
the United States.
Court painter, diplomat and international celebrity, Rubens was
one of the most influential artists of northern Europe in the
Seventeenth Century. Best known for his paintings, this universal
genius is among the most imaginative of draftsmen. His topics
vary from engaging biblical scenes to alluring nudes, from
animated and stately portraits to poignant animal studies and
from landscapes sketched from nature to complex allegories.
At the core of the exhibition is a major unprecedented loan from
the Albertina - more than 30 drawings by Rubens that have left
Vienna for the first time. Among them are such celebrated works
as "Nicolaas Rubens Wearing a Coral Necklace," circa 1623,
studies of an "Ox," circa 1618, and a "Saddled Horse," circa
1615-18, and several portraits of Ruben's immediate friends and
family.
The exhibition spans Ruben's entire career, beginning with his
early training under Otto van Veen in Antwerp, where he made
ingenious copies after prints of Sixteenth Century German masters
like Hans Holbein and Tobias Stimmer. From 1600 to 1608, Rubens
lived and worked in Italy, a mind-changing experience for the
young Flemish artist. In the service of the Duke of Gonzaga in
Mantua, he was allowed to travel extensively throughout the
peninsula and even made a brief trip to Spain.
Rubens repeatedly copied antique sculptures to study their
intrinsic beauty, and to learn about anatomy. Highly impressed by
the work of Michelangelo, he copied from the Sistine ceiling
extensively. Ruben's "Libyan Sibyl," 1601-02, after the fresco by
Michelangelo, will be exhibited alongside Michelangelo's "Studies
for the Libyan Sibyl," circa 1512.
He returned to Antwerp in 1608, and in 1609 was appointed court
painter to the Archduke Albert and the Infanta Isabella,
governors of the Southern Netherlands. In the same year he
married Isabella Brant, daughter of Jan Brant, an Antwerp lawyer
and humanist. In 1610 he bought a Gothic house with a large
portico in Antwerp, to which he added an Italian palazzo for his
studio. The house can still be seen today in the manner in which
he designed it.
In the 1620s, especially, Rubens traveled extensively throughout
Europe. He visited Paris repeatedly, chiefly in connection with
Marie de Medicis's order for a series of pictures for the Palais
du Luxembourg, now in the Louvre. In 1628 - two years after
Isabella Brant died - Rubens went to Spain for the second time,
primarily on diplomatic business, but also to execute some
paintings for the court at Madrid. At this time Philip IV
appointed him secretary of the privy council of the Netherlands.
In 1629-30 he was again on a diplomatic mission, this time in
London, where he was knighted by Charles I. Back in Antwerp in
1630, he married the 16-year-old Hélène Fourment, daughter of his
friend Daniel Fourment, a dealer in silks and tapestries.
From 1610 onward, until the end of his life, Rubens, together
with his large studio, supplied courts and churches all over
Europe with innumerable altarpieces, history cycles and
portraits. While these paintings are not always by the master
alone, the preparatory drawings are.
Through the drawings, it is possible to trace not only the
creation of certain famous works, such as the Louvre's "Flemish
Kermesse," circa 1635-38, for which there will be one large
compositional drawing in the exhibition on loan from The British
Museum, but also the artist's own development from an ambitious
Italophile, visible in the powerful studies for the early Antwerp
"Raising of the Cross," 1610-11, to a retired painter-diplomat,
manifest in his leisurely yet extremely tender female portrait
studies from Rotterdam, Florence and Vienna. For the latter, it
seems to have been Fourment, or one of her equally beautiful
sisters, who sat as his model.
"Peter Paul Rubens (1577-1640): The Drawings" was organized by
Michiel Plomp, associate curator, and Anne-Marie Logan, guest
research curator, both of the Metropolitan Museum's Department of
Drawings and Prints. The exhibition is accompanied by a fully
illustrated catalog by Logan in collaboration with Plomp.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art is at 1000 Fifth Avenue at 82nd
Street. For information, www.MetMuseum.org or 212-535-7710.