fbpx
Wikipedia

Diego Velázquez

Diego Rodríguez de Silva y Velázquez,[a] Knight of the Order of Santiago (baptized June 6, 1599 – August 6, 1660) was a Spanish painter, the leading artist in the court of King Philip IV of Spain and Portugal, and of the Spanish Golden Age.

Diego Velázquez

Self-portrait, c. 1640
Born
Diego Rodríguez de Silva y Velázquez

BaptisedJune 6, 1599
DiedAugust 6, 1660 (aged 61)
Madrid, Spain
Known forPainting
Notable workThe Surrender of Breda (1634–35)
Rokeby Venus (1647–1651)
Portrait of Innocent X (1650)
Las Meninas (1656)
Las Hilanderas (c. 1657)
List of works
MovementBaroque
Signature

He was an individualistic artist of the Baroque period (c. 1600–1750). He began to paint in a precise tenebrist style, later developing a freer manner characterized by bold brushwork. In addition to numerous renditions of scenes of historical and cultural significance, he painted scores of portraits of the Spanish royal family and commoners, culminating in his masterpiece Las Meninas (1656).

Velázquez's paintings became a model for 19th-century realist and impressionist painters. In the 20th century, artists such as Pablo Picasso, Salvador Dalí, and Francis Bacon paid tribute to Velázquez by re-interpreting some of his most iconic images.

Most of his work entered the Spanish royal collection, and by far the best collection is in the Museo del Prado in Madrid, though some portraits were sent abroad as diplomatic gifts, especially to the Austrian Habsburgs.

Early life Edit

 
Birthplace of Velázquez in Seville

Velázquez was born in Seville, Spain, the first child of Juan Rodríguez de Silva, a notary, and Jerónima Velázquez. He was baptized at the church of St. Peter in Seville on Sunday, June 6, 1599.[5] The baptism most likely occurred a few days or weeks after his birth. His paternal grandparents, Diego da Silva and María Rodríguez, were Portuguese and had moved to Seville decades earlier. When Velázquez was offered knighthood in 1658, he claimed descent from the lesser nobility in order to qualify; in fact, however, his grandparents were tradespeople, and possibly Jewish conversos.[6][7][8][9] Rafael Cómez proposes Velázquez may have had Morisco lineage.[10]

Raised in modest circumstances, he showed an early gift for art, and was apprenticed to Francisco Pacheco, an artist and teacher in Seville. An early-18th-century biographer, Antonio Palomino, said Velázquez studied for a short time under Francisco de Herrera before beginning his apprenticeship under Pacheco, but this is undocumented. A contract signed on September 17, 1611, formalized a six-year apprenticeship with Pacheco, backdated to December 1610,[11] and it has been suggested that Herrera may have substituted for a traveling Pacheco between December 1610 and September 1611.[12]

Though considered a dull and undistinguished painter, Pacheco sometimes expressed a simple, direct realism although his work remained essentially Mannerist.[13] As a teacher, he was highly learned and encouraged his students' intellectual development. In Pacheco's school, Velázquez studied the classics, was trained in proportion and perspective, and witnessed the trends in the literary and artistic circles of Seville.[14]

 
Vieja friendo huevos (1618, English: Old Woman Frying Eggs). National Gallery of Scotland, Edinburgh

On April 23, 1618, Velázquez married Juana Pacheco (June 1, 1602 – August 10, 1660), the daughter of his teacher. They had two daughters. The elder, Francisca de Silva Velázquez y Pacheco (1619–1658), married painter Juan Bautista Martínez del Mazo at the Church of Santiago in Madrid on August 21, 1633. The younger, Ignacia de Silva Velázquez y Pacheco, born in 1621, died in infancy.[15]

Velázquez's earliest works are bodegones (kitchen scenes with prominent still-life). He was one of the first Spanish artists to paint such scenes, and his Old Woman Frying Eggs (1618) demonstrates the young artist's unusual skill in realistic depiction.[16] The realism and dramatic lighting of this work may have been influenced by Caravaggio's work—which Velázquez could have seen second-hand, in copies—and by the polychrome sculpture in Sevillian churches.[17] Two of his bodegones, Kitchen Scene with Christ in the House of Martha (1618) and Kitchen Scene with Christ at Emmaus (c. 1618), feature religious scenes in the background, painted in a way that creates ambiguity as to whether the religious scene is a painting on the wall, a representation of the thoughts of the kitchen maid in the foreground, or an actual incident seen through a window.[18][19] The Virgin of the Immaculate Conception (1618–19) follows a formula used by Pacheco, but replaces the idealized facial type and smoothly finished surfaces of his teacher with the face of a local girl and varied brushwork.[20] His other religious works include The Adoration of the Magi (1619) and Saint John the Evangelist on the Island of Patmos (1618–19), both of which begin to express his more pointed and careful realism.

Also from this period are the portrait of Sor Jerónima de la Fuente (1620) – Velázquez's first full-length portrait[21] – and the genre The Water Seller of Seville (1618–1622). The Water Seller of Seville has been termed "the peak of Velázquez's bodegones" and is admired for its virtuoso rendering of volumes and textures as well as for its enigmatic gravitas.[22]

To Madrid (early period) Edit

 
Philip IV in Brown and Silver, 1632

Velázquez had established his reputation in Seville by the early 1620s. He traveled to Madrid in April 1622, with letters of introduction to Don Juan de Fonseca, chaplain to the King. Velázquez was not allowed to paint the new king, Philip IV, but portrayed the poet Luis de Góngora at the request of Pacheco.[23] The portrait showed Góngora crowned with a laurel wreath, which Velázquez later painted over.[24] He returned to Seville in January 1623 and remained there until August.[25]

In December 1622, Rodrigo de Villandrando, the king's favorite court painter, died.[26] Velázquez received a command to come to the court from Gaspar de Guzmán, Count-Duke of Olivares, the powerful minister of Philip IV. He was offered 50 ducats (175 g of gold) to defray his expenses, and he was accompanied by his father-in-law. Fonseca lodged the young painter in his home and sat for a portrait, which, when completed, was conveyed to the royal palace.[23] A portrait of the king was commissioned, and on August 30, 1623, Philip IV sat for Velázquez.[23] The portrait pleased the king, and Olivares commanded Velázquez to move to Madrid, promising that no other painter would ever paint Philip's portrait and all other portraits of the king would be withdrawn from circulation.[27] 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.

 
El Triunfo de Baco or Los Borrachos 1629 (English: The Triumph of Bacchus/The Drunks)
 
Portrait of the Infanta Maria Theresa, Philip IV's daughter with Elisabeth of France

Velázquez secured admission to the royal service with a salary of 20 ducats per month, lodgings and payment for the pictures he might paint. His portrait of Philip was exhibited on the steps of San Felipe and received with enthusiasm. It is now lost (as is the portrait of Fonseca).[28] 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, the Dutch portrait painter of Philip II, who exercised a considerable influence on the Spanish school. Velázquez depicts Philip wearing the golilla, a stiff linen collar projecting at right angles from the neck. The golilla replaced the earlier court fashion of elaborate ruffed collars as part of Philip's dress reform laws during a period of economic crisis.[29]

The Prince of Wales (afterwards Charles I) arrived at the court of Spain in 1623. Records indicate that he sat for Velázquez, but the picture is now lost.[28]

In 1627, Philip set a competition for the best painters of Spain with the subject to be the expulsion of the Moors. Velázquez won. Recorded descriptions of his painting (destroyed in a fire at the palace in 1734)[30] say it depicted Philip III pointing with his baton to a crowd of men and women being led away by 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.

In September 1628, Peter Paul Rubens was positioned in Madrid as an emissary from the Infanta Isabella, and Velázquez accompanied him to view the Titians at the Escorial. Rubens, who demonstrated his brilliance as painter and courtier during the seven months of the diplomatic mission, had a high opinion of Velázquez but had no significant influence on his painting. He did, however, galvanize Velázquez's desire to see Italy and the works of the great Italian masters.[31]

In 1629, Velázquez received 100 ducats for the picture of Bacchus (The Triumph of Bacchus), also called Los Borrachos (The Drunks), a painting of a group of men in contemporary dress paying homage to a half-naked ivy-crowned young man seated on a wine barrel. Velázquez's first mythological painting,[32] it has been interpreted variously as a depiction of a theatrical performance, as a parody, or as a symbolic representation of peasants asking the god of wine to give them relief from their sorrows.[33] The style shows the naturalism of Velázquez's early works slightly touched by the influence of Titian and Rubens.[34]

Italian period Edit

In 1629, Velázquez was given permission to spend a year and a half in Italy. Though this first visit is recognized as a crucial chapter in the development of his style—and in the history of Spanish Royal Patronage, since Philip IV sponsored his trip—few details and specifics are known of what the painter saw, whom he met, how he was perceived and what innovations he hoped to introduce into his painting.

He traveled to Venice, Ferrara, Cento, Loreto, Bologna, and Rome.[18] In 1630, he visited Naples to paint the portrait of Maria Anna of Spain, and there he probably met Ribera.[18] The major works from his first Italian period are Joseph's Bloody Coat brought to Jacob (1629–30) and Apollo in the Forge of Vulcan (1630), both of which reveal his ambition to rival the Italians as a history painter in the grand manner.[35] The two compositions of several nearly life-sized figures have similar dimensions, and may have been conceived as pendants—the biblical scene depicting a deception, and the mythological scene depicting the revelation of a deception.[36] As he had done in The Triumph of Bacchus, Velázquez presented his characters as contemporary people whose gestures and facial expressions were those of everyday life.[37] Following the example of Bolognese painters such as Guido Reni, Velázquez painted Apollo in the Forge of Vulcan on canvas prepared with a light gray ground rather than the dark reddish ground of all his earlier works. The change resulted in a greater luminosity than he had previously achieved, and he made the use of light-gray grounds his regular practice.[36]

Return to Madrid (middle period) Edit

 
La rendición de Breda (1634–35) was inspired by Velázquez's first visit to Italy, in which he accompanied Ambrogio Spinola, who conquered the Dutch city of Breda a few years prior. It depicts a transfer of the key to the city from the Dutch to the Spanish army during the Siege of Breda. It is considered one of the best of Velázquez's paintings.

Velázquez returned to Madrid in January 1631.[18] That year he completed the first of his many portraits of the young prince, beginning with Prince Balthasar Charles with a Dwarf (Boston, Museum of Fine Arts).[38] ln portraits such as Equestrian portrait of prince Balthasar Charles (1635), Velázquez depicts the prince looking dignified and lordly, or in the dress of a field marshal on his prancing steed. In one version, 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.[39]

To decorate the king's new palace, the Palacio del Buen Retiro, Velázquez painted equestrian portraits of the royal family.[18] In Philip IV on Horseback (1634–35), the king is represented in profile in an image of imperturbable majesty, demonstrating expert horsemanship by executing an effortless levade.[40] The large The Surrender of Breda (1634–35), also painted for the Palacio, is Velázquez's only extant painting depicting contemporary history.[40] Its symbolic treatment of a Spanish military victory over the Dutch eschews the rhetoric of conquest and superiority that is typical in such scenes, in which a general on horseback looks down on his vanquished, kneeling opponent. Instead, Velázquez shows the Spanish general standing before his Dutch counterpart as an equal, and extending to him a hand of consolation.[41]

The impassive, saturnine face of the influential minister Olivares is familiar to us from the many portraits painted by Velázquez. Two are notable: one is 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; in the other, The Count-Duke of Olivares on Horseback (c. 1635), he is flatteringly represented as a field marshal during action. In these portraits, Velázquez well repaid the debt of gratitude that he owed to the patron who had first brought him to the king's attention.[42]

The sculptor Juan Martínez Montañés modeled a statue on one of Velázquez's equestrian portraits of the king (painted in 1636; now lost) which was cast in bronze by the Florentine sculptor Pietro Tacca and now stands in the Plaza de Oriente in Madrid.[43] Velázquez was in close attendance to Philip, and accompanied him to Aragon in 1644, where the artist painted a portrait of the monarch in the costume as he reviewed his troops in Fraga.[44]

Velázquez's paintings of Aesop and Menippus (both c. 1636–1638) portray ancient writers in the guise of portraits of beggars.[18] Mars Resting (c. 1638) is both a depiction of a mythological figure and a portrait of a weary-looking, middle-aged man posing as Mars.[45] The model is painted with attention to his individuality, while his unkempt, oversized mustache is a faintly comic incongruity.[46] The equivocal image has been interpreted in various ways: Javier Portús describes it as a "reflection on reality, representation, and the artistic vision", while Alfonso E. Pérez Sánchez says it "has also been seen as a melancholy meditation on the arms of Spain in decline".[18]

Had it not been for his 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 first known female nude painted by a Spanish artist,[18] and the only surviving female nude by Velázquez.

Portraiture Edit

 
Lady from court, c. 1635
 
Portrait of Pablo de Valladolid, 1635, a court fool of Philip IV

Besides the many portraits of Philip by Velázquez—thirty-four by one count[47]—he painted portraits of other members of the royal family: Philip's first wife, Elisabeth of Bourbon, and her children, especially her eldest son, Don Baltasar Carlos, whom Velázquez first depicted at about two years of age. Cavaliers, soldiers, churchmen, and the poet Francisco de Quevedo (now at Apsley House), sat for Velázquez.

Velázquez also painted several buffoons and dwarfs in Philip's court, whom he depicted sympathetically and with respect for their individuality, as in The Jester Don Diego de Acedo (1644), whose intelligent face and huge folio with ink-bottle and pen by his side show him to be a wise and well-educated man.[48] Pablo de Valladolid (1635), a buffoon evidently acting a part, and The Buffoon of Coria (1639) belong to this middle period.

As court painter, Velázquez had fewer commissions for religious works than any of his contemporaries.[49] Christ Crucified (1632), painted for the Convent of San Plácido in Madrid, depicts Christ immediately after death. The Savior's head hangs on his breast and a mass of dark tangled hair conceals part of the face, visually reinforcing the idea of death.[49] The figure is presented alone before a dark background.

Velázquez's son-in-law Juan Bautista Martínez del Mazo had succeeded him as usher in 1634,[50] 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 the mission of procuring paintings and sculpture for the royal collection. Rich in pictures, Spain was weak in statuary, and Velázquez was commissioned once again to proceed to Italy to make purchases.[51]

Second visit to Italy Edit

 
Portrait of Pope Innocent X, 1650

When he set out in 1649, he was accompanied by his assistant Juan de Pareja who at this point in time was a slave and who had been trained in painting by Velázquez.[52] Velázquez sailed from Málaga, landed at Genoa, and proceeded from Milan to Venice, buying paintings of Titian, Tintoretto and Veronese as he went.[53] 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 it would be seen unfavorably by the Pope; in fact Innocent was pleased with the work, and hung it in his official visitor's waiting room.[citation needed]

 
Portrait of Juan de Pareja (c. 1650)

In 1650 in Rome Velázquez also painted a portrait of Juan de Pareja, now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, USA. This portrait procured his election into the Accademia di San Luca. 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 economic use of brushwork. In November 1650, Juan de Pareja was freed from slavery by Velázquez.[54]

To this period also belong two small landscape paintings both titled View of the Garden of the Villa Medici. As landscapes apparently painted directly from nature, they were exceptional for their time, and reveal Velázquez's close study of light at different times of day.[55]

As part of his mission to procure decorations for the Room of Mirrors at the Royal Alcazar of Madrid, Velázquez commissioned Matteo Bonuccelli to cast twelve bronze copies of the Medici lions. The copies are now in the Royal Palace of Madrid and the Museo del Prado.[56]

During his time in Rome, Velázquez fathered a natural son, Antonio, whom he is not known ever to have seen.[57]

Return to Spain and later career Edit

From February 1650, Philip repeatedly sought Velázquez's return to Spain.[57] Accordingly, after visiting Naples—where he saw his old friend Jose Ribera—and Venice, Velázquez returned to Spain via Barcelona in 1651, taking with him many pictures and 300 pieces of statuary, which afterwards were arranged and catalogued for the king.

Elisabeth of France had died in 1644, and the king had married Mariana of Austria, whom Velázquez now painted in many attitudes. In 1652 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.[58] Yet far from indicating any decline, his works of this period are amongst the highest examples of his style.[59]

Las Meninas Edit

 
Las Meninas (1656)

One of the infantas, Margaret Theresa, the eldest daughter of the new queen, appears to be the subject of Las Meninas (1656, English: The Maids of Honour), Velázquez's magnum opus. Created four years before his death, it serves as an outstanding example of European baroque art. Luca Giordano, a contemporary Italian painter, referred to it as the "theology of painting",[60] and in 1827 the president of the Royal Academy of Arts Sir Thomas Lawrence described it in a letter as "the true philosophy of the art".[61] However, it is unclear as to who or what is the true subject of the picture.[62] Is it the royal daughter, or perhaps the painter himself? The king and queen are seen reflected in a mirror on the back wall, but the source of the reflection is a mystery: are the royal pair standing in the viewer's space, or does the mirror reflect the painting on which Velázquez is working? Dale Brown says Velázquez may have conceived the faded image of the king and queen on the back wall as a foreshadowing of the fall of the Spanish Empire that was to gain momentum following Philip's death.

In the 1966 book Les Mots et Les Choses (The Order of Things), philosopher Michel Foucault devotes the 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.[citation needed]

It is said the king painted the honorary Cross of Saint James of the 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 court painter a belted knight without the consent of the commission established to inquire into the purity of his lineage. The 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.[citation needed]

Final years Edit

 
Detail of Las Meninas (Velázquez's self-portrait)
 
Portrait of the eight-year-old Infanta Margarita Teresa in a Blue Dress (1659)

There were essentially only two patrons of art in Spain—the church and the art-loving king and court. Bartolomé Esteban 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 a good salary and pension.

One of his final works was Las hilanderas (The Spinners), painted circa 1657, a depiction of Ovid's Fable of Arachne.[18] The tapestry in the background is based on Titian's The Rape of Europa, or, more probably, the copy that Rubens painted in Madrid.[63] 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, gray and black.

Velázquez's final portraits of the royal children are among his finest works and in the Infanta Margarita Teresa in a Blue Dress[64] the painter's personal style reached its high-point: shimmering spots of color on wide painting surfaces produce an almost impressionistic effect – the viewer must stand at a suitable distance to get the impression of complete, three-dimensional spatiality.

His only surviving portrait of the delicate and sickly Prince Felipe Prospero[65] is remarkable for its combination of the sweet features of the child prince and his dog with a subtle sense of gloom. The hope that was placed at that time in the sole heir to the Spanish crown is reflected in the depiction: fresh red and white stand in contrast to late autumnal, morbid colors. A small dog with wide eyes looks at the viewer as if questioningly, and the largely pale background hints at a gloomy fate: the little prince was barely four years old when he died. As in all of the artist's late paintings, the handling of the colors is extraordinarily fluid and vibrant.

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. This church was destroyed by the French around 1809, so his place of interment is now unknown.[66]

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.

Style and technique Edit

It is canonical to divide Velázquez's career by his two visits to Italy. He 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.

Although acquainted with all the Italian schools and a friend of the foremost painters of his day, Velázquez was strong enough to withstand external influences and work out for himself the development of his own nature and his own principles of art. He rejected the pomp that characterized the portraiture of other European courts, and instead brought an even greater reserve to the understated formula for Habsburg portraiture established by Titian, Antonio Mor, and Alonso Sánchez Coello.[67] He is known for using a rather limited palette, but he mixed the available paints with great skill to achieve varying hues.[68] His pigments were not significantly different from those of his contemporaries and he mainly employed azurite, smalt, vermilion, red lake, lead-tin-yellow and ochres.[69] His early works were painted on canvases prepared with a red-brown ground. He adopted the use of light-gray grounds during his first trip to Italy, and continued using them for the rest of his life.[70] The change resulted in paintings with greater luminosity and a generally cool, silvery range of color.[71]

Few drawings are securely attributed to Velázquez.[72] Although preparatory drawings for some of his paintings exist, his method was to paint directly from life, and x-rays of his paintings reveal that he frequently made changes in his composition as a painting progressed.[72]

Legacy Edit

Velázquez was not prolific; he is estimated to have produced between 110 and 120 known canvases.[73] He produced no etchings or engravings, and only a few drawings are attributed to him.[74]

Velázquez is the most influential figure in the history of Spanish portraiture.[75] Although he had few immediate followers, Spanish court painters such as his son-in-law Juan Bautista Martinez del Mazo and Juan Carreño de Miranda took inspiration from his work.[75] Mazo closely mimicked his style and many paintings and copies by Mazo were formerly attributed to Velázquez.[76] Velázquez's reputation languished in the eighteenth century, when Spanish court portraiture was dominated by artists of foreign birth and training. Towards the end of the century, his importance was increasingly recognized by intellectuals close to the Spanish court—an essay published In 1781 by Gaspar Melchor de Jovellanos said of Velázquez that "when he died, the glory of Painting in Spain died with him."[77] In 1778, Goya made a set of etchings after paintings by Velázquez, as part of a project by the Count of Floridablanca to produce prints of paintings in the Royal Collection.[78] Goya's free copies reveal a searching engagement with the older master's work, which remained a model for Goya for the rest of his career.[79]

Velázquez's work was little known outside of Spain until the nineteenth century.[76] 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.[citation needed]

Velázquez is often cited as a key influence on the art of Édouard Manet, who is often considered the bridge between realism and impressionism. Calling Velázquez the "painter of painters",[71] Manet admired the immediacy and vivid brushwork of Velázquez's work, and built upon Velázquez's motifs in his own art.[80] In the late nineteenth century, artists such as James McNeill Whistler and John Singer Sargent were strongly influenced by Velázquez.[18]

Modern recreations of classics Edit

The respect with which twentieth-century painters regard Velázquez's work attests to its continuing importance. Pablo Picasso paid homage to Velázquez in 1957 when he recreated Las Meninas in 44 variations, in his characteristic style.[81] Although Picasso was concerned that his reinterpretations of Velázquez's painting would be seen merely as copies rather than unique representations, the enormous works—including the largest he had produced since Guernica in 1937—obtained a position of importance in the canon of Spanish art.[citation needed]

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 With the Lights and Shadows of His Own Glory. 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.[citation needed]

The Anglo-Irish painter Francis Bacon found Velázquez's portrait of Pope Innocent X to be "one of the greatest portraits ever".[82] He created several expressionist variations of this piece in the 1950s; however, Bacon's paintings presented a more gruesome image of Innocent. One such famous variation, entitled Figure with Meat (1954), shows the pope between two halves of a bisected cow.[citation needed]

Recent rediscoveries of Velázquez originals Edit

In 2009, the Portrait of a Man in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, which had long been associated with the followers of Velázquez' style of painting, was cleaned and restored. It was found to be by Velázquez himself, and the features of the man match those of a figure in the painting "the Surrender of Breda". The newly cleaned canvas may therefore be a study for that painting. Although the attribution to Velázquez is regarded as certain, the identity of the sitter is still open to question. Some art historians consider this new study to be a self-portrait by Velázquez.[83]

In 2010, it was reported that a damaged painting long relegated to a basement of the Yale University Art Gallery might be an early work by Velázquez. Thought to have been given to Yale in 1925, the painting has previously been attributed to the 17th-century Spanish school. Some scholars are prepared to attribute the painting to Velázquez, though the Prado Museum in Madrid is reserving judgment. The work, which depicts the Virgin Mary being taught to read, will be restored by conservators at Yale.[84][85]

In October 2011, it was confirmed by art historian Dr. Peter Cherry of Trinity College Dublin through X-ray analysis that a portrait found in the UK in the former collection of the 19th-century painter Matthew Shepperson is a previously unknown work by Velázquez. The portrait is of an unidentified man in his fifties or sixties, who could possibly be Juan Mateos, the Master of the Hunt for Velázquez's patron, King Philip IV of Spain.[86] The painting measures 47 x 39 cm and was sold at auction on December 7, 2011, for £3,000,000.[87]

Descendants Edit

Velázquez, through his daughter Francisca de Silva Velázquez y Pacheco (1619–1658), is an ancestor of the Marquesses of Monteleone, including Enriquetta (Henrietta) Casado de Monteleone (1725–1761) who in 1746 married Heinrich VI, Count Reuss zu Köstritz (1707–1783). Through them are descended a number of European royalty, among them King Felipe VI of Spain through his mother Sophia of Greece and Denmark,[88] King Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands, King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden, King Albert II of Belgium, Hans-Adam II, Prince of Liechtenstein, and Henri, Grand Duke of Luxembourg.[89]

Popular culture Edit

Velázquez has been portrayed by Julián Villagrán in a Spanish fantasy television series, El ministerio del tiempo, and is a recurring character in the series.[90]

Notes Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b "Velázquez, Diego"[dead link] (US) and "Velázquez, Diego". Lexico UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ "Velázquez". Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary.
  3. ^ "Velázquez". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (5th ed.). HarperCollins. Retrieved 18 October 2019.
  4. ^ "Velázquez". Collins English Dictionary. HarperCollins. Retrieved 18 October 2019.
  5. ^ Carr et al. 2006, p. 26.
  6. ^ Samuel, Edgar (17 June 1996). "The Jewish ancestry of Velasquez". Jewish Historical Studies. 35: 27–32. JSTOR 29779978.
  7. ^ Newitt, Malyn (2009). Portugal in European and World History. London: Reaktion Books. p. 98. ISBN 9781861895196.
  8. ^ Otaka, Yasujiro (September 2000). "An Aspiration Sealed". Special Issue: Art History and the Jew. Studies in Western Art. Retrieved 2007-12-08.
  9. ^ Ingram, Kevin (1999). "Diego Velázquez's Secret History", Boletín del Museo del Prado, XVII (35): 69–85.
  10. ^ Cómez Ramos, Rafael (2002). "La parentela de Velázquez". Laboratorio de Arte (15): 383–388.
  11. ^ Carr et al. 2006, p. 53.
  12. ^ Harris 1982, p. 9.
  13. ^ Carr et al. 2006, p. 28.
  14. ^ Carr et al. 2006, p. 14.
  15. ^ . Marriage.about.com. Archived from the original on 2011-10-25. Retrieved December 22, 2010.
  16. ^ Carr et al. 2006, p. 27.
  17. ^ Carr et al. 2006, p. 29.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Sánchez, Alfonso E. Pérez (January 1, 2003). "Velázquez, Diego". Grove Art Online.
  19. ^ Carr et al. 2006, pp. 122, 126.
  20. ^ Carr et al. 2006, pp. 28, 29.
  21. ^ Carr et al. 2006, p. 142.
  22. ^ Carr et al. 2006, p. 130.
  23. ^ a b c Carr et al. 2006, p. 245.
  24. ^ Carr et al. 2006, p. 144.
  25. ^ Carr et al. 2006, pp. 29, 245.
  26. ^ Harris 1982, p. 57.
  27. ^ Harris 1982, pp. 12, 200.
  28. ^ a b Harris 1982, p. 12.
  29. ^ Harris 1982, p. 61.
  30. ^ Carr et al. 2006, p. 31.
  31. ^ Ortega y Gasset 1953, p. 37.
  32. ^ Carr et al. 2006, p. 32.
  33. ^ Harris 1982, p. 74.
  34. ^ Harris 1982, p. 73.
  35. ^ Carr et al. 2006, p. 33.
  36. ^ a b Carr et al. 2006, p. 157.
  37. ^ Carr et al. 2006, p. 147.
  38. ^ Asturias and Bardi 1969, p. 93.
  39. ^ Carr et al. 2006, p. 182.
  40. ^ a b Carr et al. 2006, p. 38.
  41. ^ Carr et al. 2006, pp. 38–41.
  42. ^ Carr et al. 2006, pp. 164, 180.
  43. ^ Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Juan Martínez Montañés" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  44. ^ Carr et al. 2006, p. 20.
  45. ^ Portús 2004, p. 25.
  46. ^ Carr et al. 2006, p. 212.
  47. ^ Ortega y Gasset 1953, p. 45.
  48. ^ Carr et al. 2006, p. 42.
  49. ^ a b Carr et al. 2006, p. 36.
  50. ^ Asturias and Bardi 1969, p. 84.
  51. ^ Harris 1982, pp. 24–25.
  52. ^ Harris 1982, pp. 25, 27, 87.
  53. ^ Harris 1982, pp. 25, 28.
  54. ^ The manumission document was discovered by Jennifer Montagu. See Burlington Magazine, volume 125, 1983, pp. 683–4.
  55. ^ Harris 1982, pp. 141–143; Ortega y Gasset 1953, p. 38.
  56. ^ "León – Colección – Museo Nacional del Prado". www.museodelprado.es.
  57. ^ a b Carr et al. 2006, p. 247.
  58. ^ Carr et al. 2006, p. 46.
  59. ^ Carr et al. 2006, p. 47.
  60. ^ Asturias and Bardi 1969, p. 106.
  61. ^ Gower, Ronald Sutherland (1900). Sir Thomas Lawrence. London, Paris & New York: Goupil & co. p. 83.
  62. ^ Carr et al. 2006, p. 48.
  63. ^ Bird, Wendy. "The Bobbin and the Distaff" 2011-08-11 at the Wayback Machine, Apollo, 2007-11-01. Retrieved on May 28, 2009.
  64. ^ Kunsthistorisches Museum, Wien "Infantin Margarita Teresa (1651–1673) in blauem Kleid | Diego Rodríguez de Silva y Velázquez | 1659 | Inv. No.: GG_2130" 2013-11-01 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on January 27, 2014.
  65. ^ Kunsthistorisches Museum, Wien "Infant Philipp Prosper (1657–1661) | Diego Rodríguez de Silva y Velázquez | 1659 | Inv. No.: GG_319" 2014-10-26 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on January 27, 2014.
  66. ^ Goodman, Al (September 7, 1999). "ARTS ABROAD; A Furor for Velazquez: His Art but Also His Bones". The New York Times.
  67. ^ Carr et al. 2006, p. 30.
  68. ^ McKim-Smith et al. 1988.
  69. ^ Diego Velázquez, ColourLex
  70. ^ Carr et al. 2006, pp. 71, 78.
  71. ^ a b Carr et al. 2006, p. 79.
  72. ^ a b McKim-Smith, Gridley. (December 1979), "On Velázquez's Working Method". The Art Bulletin. 61 (4): 589–603.
  73. ^ Vogel, Carol (September 10, 2009). "An Old Spanish Master Emerges From Grime". The New York Times. Retrieved September 11, 2009. Jonathan Brown, this country's leading Velázquez expert ... "Velázquez was a painter who measured out his genius in thimblefuls." His output was so small that, depending on who's counting, Mr. Brown estimates, there are only 110 to 120 known canvases by the artist.
  74. ^ Harris 1982, p. 178.
  75. ^ a b Portús 2004, p. 57.
  76. ^ a b Harris 1982, p. 183.
  77. ^ Portús 2004, p. 200.
  78. ^ Portús 2004, p. 201.
  79. ^ Portús 2004, pp. 204–207.
  80. ^ Schjeldahl, Peter (November 10, 2002). "The Spanish Lesson: Manet's gift from Velázquez". The New Yorker. Retrieved May 25, 2019.
  81. ^ Harris 1982, p. 177.
  82. ^ Arya, Rina (2009). "Painting the Pope: An Analysis of Francis Bacon's Study After Velázquez's Portrait of Innocent X". Literature and Theology, 23 (1), 33–50.
  83. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-07-09. Retrieved 2010-04-12.
  84. ^ Tremlett, Giles (July 1, 2010). "Yale basement yields Spanish treasure – a possible Velázquez masterpiece". The Guardian. UK. Retrieved December 22, 2010.
  85. ^ . CBC News. July 3, 2010. Archived from the original on July 6, 2010. Retrieved December 22, 2010.
  86. ^ Jury, Louise (27 October 2011). . London Evening Standard. Archived from the original on 29 October 2011. Retrieved October 27, 2011.
  87. ^ "Rediscovered Velazquez painting sold for £3m at auction". BBC News. 7 December 2011. Retrieved September 29, 2012.
  88. ^ "Relationship between Queen Sofia of Spain and Velazquez". Europeandynasties.com. Retrieved December 22, 2010.
  89. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-05-16. Retrieved 2009-07-19.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  90. ^ "Julián Villagrán es Diego de Velázquez en la serie 'El Ministerio del Tiempo'". RTVE.es (in Spanish). 2015-01-29. Retrieved 2021-03-10.

Sources Edit

  • Asturias, Miguel Angel, and P. M. Bardi (1969). L'opera completa di Velázquez. Milano: Rizzoli. OCLC 991877516.
  • Carr, Dawson W., Xavier Bray, and Diego Velázquez (2006). Velázquez. London: National Gallery. ISBN 1857093038.
  • Harris, Enriqueta (1982). Velazquez. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press. ISBN 0801415268.
  • McKim-Smith, G., Andersen-Bergdoll, G., Newman, R. (1988). Examining Velazquez. Yale University Press. ISBN 0300036159.
  • Ortega y Gasset, José (1953). Velazquez. New York: Random House. OCLC 989292513.
  • Portús, Javier (2004). The Spanish Portrait from El Greco to Picasso [exposition, Museo nacional del Prado, 20 october 2004-6 february 2005]. London: Scala. ISBN 185759374X.

Further reading Edit

  • Brown, Dale (1969). The World of Velázquez: 1599–1660. New York: Time-Life Books. ISBN 0-8094-0252-1.
  • Brown, Jonathan (1978). Images and Ideas in Seventeenth-Century Spanish Painting Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey, ISBN 0-691-03941-0.
  • Brown, Jonathan (1986). Velázquez: Painter and Courtier. Yale University Press, New Haven. ISBN 0-300-03466-0.
  • Brown, Jonathan (1988). "Enemies of Flattery: Velázquez' Portraits of Philip IV", in Rotberg, Robert I. and Rabb, Theodore K., Art and History: Images and Their Meaning, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Brown, Jonathan (2008). Collected Writings on Velázquez, CEEH & Yale University Press, New Haven. ISBN 978-0-300-14493-2.
  • Calvo Serraller, Francisco (1999). Velázquez. Madrid: Electa. ISBN 84-8156-203-3.
  • Davies, David and Enriqueta Harris (1996) Velázquez in Seville National Gallery of Scotland, Edinburgh. ISBN 0-300-06949-9.
  • Domínguez Ortiz, A.; Gállego, J. & Pérez Sánchez, A.E. (1989). Velázquez . New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 9780810939066.
  • Elizabeth McGrath and Jean Michel Massing The Slave in European Art. The Warburg Institute 2012.
  • (PDF). El Pais Digital. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 24, 2004. Retrieved 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 (September 1992), pp. 453–456.
  • Kahr, Madlyn Millner (1976). Velázquez: The Art of Painting. Harper & Row.
  • Knox, Giles. Velázquez's King Philip IV of Spain from the Frick Collection (Masterpiece in Residence series). Dallas and New York: Meadows Museum, SMU in association with Scala Arts Publishers, Inc. (2022). ISBN 978-1-78551-444-9.
  • Moser, Wolf (2011). Diego de Silva Velázquez: Das Werk und der Maler 2 vols. Edition Saint-Georges, Lyon. ISBN 978-3-00-032155-9.
  • Pacheco, Francisco and Palomino, Antonio (2018). Lives of Velázquez, Getty Publications. ISBN 978-1-60606-5884.
  • Passuth, László: Más perenne que el bronce – Velázquez y la corte de Felipe IV (Título original: A harmadik udvarmester) / Noguer y Caralt Editores, 2000.
  • Prater, Andreas (2007). Venus ante el espejo, CEEH. ISBN 978-84-936060-0-8.
  • Salort-Pons, Salvador, "Velázquez en Italia", Fundación de Apoyo a la História del Arte Hispanico, Madrid 2002. ISBN 84-932891-1-6
  • Stratton-Pruitt, Suzanne L., ed. (2002). The Cambridge Companion to Velázquez. Cambridge University Press.
  • "Velázquez, Diego" (1995). Enciclopedia Hispánica. Barcelona: Encyclopædia Britannica Publishers. ISBN 1-56409-007-8.
  • Wolf, Norbert (1998) Diego Velázquez, 1599–1660: the face of Spain Taschen, Köln. ISBN 3-8228-6511-7.

External links Edit

  • 46 artworks by or after Diego Velázquez at the Art UK site
  • Velázquez works at the Web Gallery of Art
  • Velázquez at Artcyclopedia.com
  • 202 paintings by Diego Velázquez at DiegoVelazquez.org
  • Diego Velázquez at WikiPaintings.org
  • at Owlstand.com
  • Diego Velázquez, Collection of resources and illustrated pigment analyses. ColourLex.

diego, velázquez, velázquez, redirects, here, other, uses, velazquez, other, uses, disambiguation, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, rodríguez, silva, second, maternal, family, name, velázquez, diego, rodríguez, silva, velázquez, knight, order, sa. Velazquez redirects here For other uses see Velazquez For other uses see Diego Velazquez disambiguation In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Rodriguez de Silva and the second or maternal family name is Velazquez Diego Rodriguez de Silva y Velazquez a Knight of the Order of Santiago baptized June 6 1599 August 6 1660 was a Spanish painter the leading artist in the court of King Philip IV of Spain and Portugal and of the Spanish Golden Age Diego VelazquezKnight of the Order of SantiagoSelf portrait c 1640BornDiego Rodriguez de Silva y VelazquezSeville SpainBaptisedJune 6 1599DiedAugust 6 1660 aged 61 Madrid SpainKnown forPaintingNotable workThe Surrender of Breda 1634 35 Rokeby Venus 1647 1651 Portrait of Innocent X 1650 Las Meninas 1656 Las Hilanderas c 1657 List of worksMovementBaroqueSignatureHe was an individualistic artist of the Baroque period c 1600 1750 He began to paint in a precise tenebrist style later developing a freer manner characterized by bold brushwork In addition to numerous renditions of scenes of historical and cultural significance he painted scores of portraits of the Spanish royal family and commoners culminating in his masterpiece Las Meninas 1656 Velazquez s paintings became a model for 19th century realist and impressionist painters In the 20th century artists such as Pablo Picasso Salvador Dali and Francis Bacon paid tribute to Velazquez by re interpreting some of his most iconic images Most of his work entered the Spanish royal collection and by far the best collection is in the Museo del Prado in Madrid though some portraits were sent abroad as diplomatic gifts especially to the Austrian Habsburgs Contents 1 Early life 2 To Madrid early period 3 Italian period 3 1 Return to Madrid middle period 3 1 1 Portraiture 3 2 Second visit to Italy 4 Return to Spain and later career 4 1 Las Meninas 4 2 Final years 5 Style and technique 6 Legacy 6 1 Modern recreations of classics 6 2 Recent rediscoveries of Velazquez originals 6 3 Descendants 7 Popular culture 8 Notes 9 References 10 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life Edit Birthplace of Velazquez in SevilleVelazquez was born in Seville Spain the first child of Juan Rodriguez de Silva a notary and Jeronima Velazquez He was baptized at the church of St Peter in Seville on Sunday June 6 1599 5 The baptism most likely occurred a few days or weeks after his birth His paternal grandparents Diego da Silva and Maria Rodriguez were Portuguese and had moved to Seville decades earlier When Velazquez was offered knighthood in 1658 he claimed descent from the lesser nobility in order to qualify in fact however his grandparents were tradespeople and possibly Jewish conversos 6 7 8 9 Rafael Comez proposes Velazquez may have had Morisco lineage 10 Raised in modest circumstances he showed an early gift for art and was apprenticed to Francisco Pacheco an artist and teacher in Seville An early 18th century biographer Antonio Palomino said Velazquez studied for a short time under Francisco de Herrera before beginning his apprenticeship under Pacheco but this is undocumented A contract signed on September 17 1611 formalized a six year apprenticeship with Pacheco backdated to December 1610 11 and it has been suggested that Herrera may have substituted for a traveling Pacheco between December 1610 and September 1611 12 Though considered a dull and undistinguished painter Pacheco sometimes expressed a simple direct realism although his work remained essentially Mannerist 13 As a teacher he was highly learned and encouraged his students intellectual development In Pacheco s school Velazquez studied the classics was trained in proportion and perspective and witnessed the trends in the literary and artistic circles of Seville 14 Vieja friendo huevos 1618 English Old Woman Frying Eggs National Gallery of Scotland EdinburghOn April 23 1618 Velazquez married Juana Pacheco June 1 1602 August 10 1660 the daughter of his teacher They had two daughters The elder Francisca de Silva Velazquez y Pacheco 1619 1658 married painter Juan Bautista Martinez del Mazo at the Church of Santiago in Madrid on August 21 1633 The younger Ignacia de Silva Velazquez y Pacheco born in 1621 died in infancy 15 Velazquez s earliest works are bodegones kitchen scenes with prominent still life He was one of the first Spanish artists to paint such scenes and his Old Woman Frying Eggs 1618 demonstrates the young artist s unusual skill in realistic depiction 16 The realism and dramatic lighting of this work may have been influenced by Caravaggio s work which Velazquez could have seen second hand in copies and by the polychrome sculpture in Sevillian churches 17 Two of his bodegones Kitchen Scene with Christ in the House of Martha 1618 and Kitchen Scene with Christ at Emmaus c 1618 feature religious scenes in the background painted in a way that creates ambiguity as to whether the religious scene is a painting on the wall a representation of the thoughts of the kitchen maid in the foreground or an actual incident seen through a window 18 19 The Virgin of the Immaculate Conception 1618 19 follows a formula used by Pacheco but replaces the idealized facial type and smoothly finished surfaces of his teacher with the face of a local girl and varied brushwork 20 His other religious works include The Adoration of the Magi 1619 and Saint John the Evangelist on the Island of Patmos 1618 19 both of which begin to express his more pointed and careful realism Also from this period are the portrait of Sor Jeronima de la Fuente 1620 Velazquez s first full length portrait 21 and the genre The Water Seller of Seville 1618 1622 The Water Seller of Seville has been termed the peak of Velazquez s bodegones and is admired for its virtuoso rendering of volumes and textures as well as for its enigmatic gravitas 22 To Madrid early period Edit Philip IV in Brown and Silver 1632Velazquez had established his reputation in Seville by the early 1620s He traveled to Madrid in April 1622 with letters of introduction to Don Juan de Fonseca chaplain to the King Velazquez was not allowed to paint the new king Philip IV but portrayed the poet Luis de Gongora at the request of Pacheco 23 The portrait showed Gongora crowned with a laurel wreath which Velazquez later painted over 24 He returned to Seville in January 1623 and remained there until August 25 In December 1622 Rodrigo de Villandrando the king s favorite court painter died 26 Velazquez received a command to come to the court from Gaspar de Guzman Count Duke of Olivares the powerful minister of Philip IV He was offered 50 ducats 175 g of gold to defray his expenses and he was accompanied by his father in law Fonseca lodged the young painter in his home and sat for a portrait which when completed was conveyed to the royal palace 23 A portrait of the king was commissioned and on August 30 1623 Philip IV sat for Velazquez 23 The portrait pleased the king and Olivares commanded Velazquez to move to Madrid promising that no other painter would ever paint Philip s portrait and all other portraits of the king would be withdrawn from circulation 27 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 El Triunfo de Baco or Los Borrachos 1629 English The Triumph of Bacchus The Drunks Portrait of the Infanta Maria Theresa Philip IV s daughter with Elisabeth of FranceVelazquez secured admission to the royal service with a salary of 20 ducats per month lodgings and payment for the pictures he might paint His portrait of Philip was exhibited on the steps of San Felipe and received with enthusiasm It is now lost as is the portrait of Fonseca 28 The Museo del Prado however has two of Velazquez 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 the Dutch portrait painter of Philip II who exercised a considerable influence on the Spanish school Velazquez depicts Philip wearing the golilla a stiff linen collar projecting at right angles from the neck The golilla replaced the earlier court fashion of elaborate ruffed collars as part of Philip s dress reform laws during a period of economic crisis 29 The Prince of Wales afterwards Charles I arrived at the court of Spain in 1623 Records indicate that he sat for Velazquez but the picture is now lost 28 In 1627 Philip set a competition for the best painters of Spain with the subject to be the expulsion of the Moors Velazquez won Recorded descriptions of his painting destroyed in a fire at the palace in 1734 30 say it depicted Philip III pointing with his baton to a crowd of men and women being led away by soldiers while the female personification of Spain sits in calm repose Velazquez was appointed gentleman usher as reward Later he also received a daily allowance of 12 reis the same amount allotted to the court barbers and 90 ducats a year for dress In September 1628 Peter Paul Rubens was positioned in Madrid as an emissary from the Infanta Isabella and Velazquez accompanied him to view the Titians at the Escorial Rubens who demonstrated his brilliance as painter and courtier during the seven months of the diplomatic mission had a high opinion of Velazquez but had no significant influence on his painting He did however galvanize Velazquez s desire to see Italy and the works of the great Italian masters 31 In 1629 Velazquez received 100 ducats for the picture of Bacchus The Triumph of Bacchus also called Los Borrachos The Drunks a painting of a group of men in contemporary dress paying homage to a half naked ivy crowned young man seated on a wine barrel Velazquez s first mythological painting 32 it has been interpreted variously as a depiction of a theatrical performance as a parody or as a symbolic representation of peasants asking the god of wine to give them relief from their sorrows 33 The style shows the naturalism of Velazquez s early works slightly touched by the influence of Titian and Rubens 34 Italian period EditIn 1629 Velazquez was given permission to spend a year and a half in Italy Though this first visit is recognized as a crucial chapter in the development of his style and in the history of Spanish Royal Patronage since Philip IV sponsored his trip few details and specifics are known of what the painter saw whom he met how he was perceived and what innovations he hoped to introduce into his painting He traveled to Venice Ferrara Cento Loreto Bologna and Rome 18 In 1630 he visited Naples to paint the portrait of Maria Anna of Spain and there he probably met Ribera 18 The major works from his first Italian period are Joseph s Bloody Coat brought to Jacob 1629 30 and Apollo in the Forge of Vulcan 1630 both of which reveal his ambition to rival the Italians as a history painter in the grand manner 35 The two compositions of several nearly life sized figures have similar dimensions and may have been conceived as pendants the biblical scene depicting a deception and the mythological scene depicting the revelation of a deception 36 As he had done in The Triumph of Bacchus Velazquez presented his characters as contemporary people whose gestures and facial expressions were those of everyday life 37 Following the example of Bolognese painters such as Guido Reni Velazquez painted Apollo in the Forge of Vulcan on canvas prepared with a light gray ground rather than the dark reddish ground of all his earlier works The change resulted in a greater luminosity than he had previously achieved and he made the use of light gray grounds his regular practice 36 Return to Madrid middle period Edit La rendicion de Breda 1634 35 was inspired by Velazquez s first visit to Italy in which he accompanied Ambrogio Spinola who conquered the Dutch city of Breda a few years prior It depicts a transfer of the key to the city from the Dutch to the Spanish army during the Siege of Breda It is considered one of the best of Velazquez s paintings Velazquez returned to Madrid in January 1631 18 That year he completed the first of his many portraits of the young prince beginning with Prince Balthasar Charles with a Dwarf Boston Museum of Fine Arts 38 ln portraits such as Equestrian portrait of prince Balthasar Charles 1635 Velazquez depicts the prince looking dignified and lordly or in the dress of a field marshal on his prancing steed In one version 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 39 To decorate the king s new palace the Palacio del Buen Retiro Velazquez painted equestrian portraits of the royal family 18 In Philip IV on Horseback 1634 35 the king is represented in profile in an image of imperturbable majesty demonstrating expert horsemanship by executing an effortless levade 40 The large The Surrender of Breda 1634 35 also painted for the Palacio is Velazquez s only extant painting depicting contemporary history 40 Its symbolic treatment of a Spanish military victory over the Dutch eschews the rhetoric of conquest and superiority that is typical in such scenes in which a general on horseback looks down on his vanquished kneeling opponent Instead Velazquez shows the Spanish general standing before his Dutch counterpart as an equal and extending to him a hand of consolation 41 The impassive saturnine face of the influential minister Olivares is familiar to us from the many portraits painted by Velazquez Two are notable one is 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 in the other The Count Duke of Olivares on Horseback c 1635 he is flatteringly represented as a field marshal during action In these portraits Velazquez well repaid the debt of gratitude that he owed to the patron who had first brought him to the king s attention 42 The sculptor Juan Martinez Montanes modeled a statue on one of Velazquez s equestrian portraits of the king painted in 1636 now lost which was cast in bronze by the Florentine sculptor Pietro Tacca and now stands in the Plaza de Oriente in Madrid 43 Velazquez was in close attendance to Philip and accompanied him to Aragon in 1644 where the artist painted a portrait of the monarch in the costume as he reviewed his troops in Fraga 44 Velazquez s paintings of Aesop and Menippus both c 1636 1638 portray ancient writers in the guise of portraits of beggars 18 Mars Resting c 1638 is both a depiction of a mythological figure and a portrait of a weary looking middle aged man posing as Mars 45 The model is painted with attention to his individuality while his unkempt oversized mustache is a faintly comic incongruity 46 The equivocal image has been interpreted in various ways Javier Portus describes it as a reflection on reality representation and the artistic vision while Alfonso E Perez Sanchez says it has also been seen as a melancholy meditation on the arms of Spain in decline 18 Had it not been for his royal appointment which enabled Velazquez 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 first known female nude painted by a Spanish artist 18 and the only surviving female nude by Velazquez Portraiture Edit Lady from court c 1635 Portrait of Pablo de Valladolid 1635 a court fool of Philip IVBesides the many portraits of Philip by Velazquez thirty four by one count 47 he painted portraits of other members of the royal family Philip s first wife Elisabeth of Bourbon and her children especially her eldest son Don Baltasar Carlos whom Velazquez first depicted at about two years of age Cavaliers soldiers churchmen and the poet Francisco de Quevedo now at Apsley House sat for Velazquez Velazquez also painted several buffoons and dwarfs in Philip s court whom he depicted sympathetically and with respect for their individuality as in The Jester Don Diego de Acedo 1644 whose intelligent face and huge folio with ink bottle and pen by his side show him to be a wise and well educated man 48 Pablo de Valladolid 1635 a buffoon evidently acting a part and The Buffoon of Coria 1639 belong to this middle period As court painter Velazquez had fewer commissions for religious works than any of his contemporaries 49 Christ Crucified 1632 painted for the Convent of San Placido in Madrid depicts Christ immediately after death The Savior s head hangs on his breast and a mass of dark tangled hair conceals part of the face visually reinforcing the idea of death 49 The figure is presented alone before a dark background Velazquez s son in law Juan Bautista Martinez del Mazo had succeeded him as usher in 1634 50 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 Velazquez with the mission of procuring paintings and sculpture for the royal collection Rich in pictures Spain was weak in statuary and Velazquez was commissioned once again to proceed to Italy to make purchases 51 Second visit to Italy Edit Portrait of Pope Innocent X 1650When he set out in 1649 he was accompanied by his assistant Juan de Pareja who at this point in time was a slave and who had been trained in painting by Velazquez 52 Velazquez sailed from Malaga landed at Genoa and proceeded from Milan to Venice buying paintings of Titian Tintoretto and Veronese as he went 53 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 Velazquez now proceeded There he was received with marked favor by the Pope who presented him with a medal and golden chain Velazquez 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 Velazquez 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 it would be seen unfavorably by the Pope in fact Innocent was pleased with the work and hung it in his official visitor s waiting room citation needed Portrait of Juan de Pareja c 1650 In 1650 in Rome Velazquez also painted a portrait of Juan de Pareja now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City USA This portrait procured his election into the Accademia di San Luca Purportedly Velazquez 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 economic use of brushwork In November 1650 Juan de Pareja was freed from slavery by Velazquez 54 To this period also belong two small landscape paintings both titled View of the Garden of the Villa Medici As landscapes apparently painted directly from nature they were exceptional for their time and reveal Velazquez s close study of light at different times of day 55 As part of his mission to procure decorations for the Room of Mirrors at the Royal Alcazar of Madrid Velazquez commissioned Matteo Bonuccelli to cast twelve bronze copies of the Medici lions The copies are now in the Royal Palace of Madrid and the Museo del Prado 56 During his time in Rome Velazquez fathered a natural son Antonio whom he is not known ever to have seen 57 Return to Spain and later career EditFrom February 1650 Philip repeatedly sought Velazquez s return to Spain 57 Accordingly after visiting Naples where he saw his old friend Jose Ribera and Venice Velazquez returned to Spain via Barcelona in 1651 taking with him many pictures and 300 pieces of statuary which afterwards were arranged and catalogued for the king Elisabeth of France had died in 1644 and the king had married Mariana of Austria whom Velazquez now painted in many attitudes In 1652 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 58 Yet far from indicating any decline his works of this period are amongst the highest examples of his style 59 Las Meninas Edit Main article Las Meninas Las Meninas 1656 One of the infantas Margaret Theresa the eldest daughter of the new queen appears to be the subject of Las Meninas 1656 English The Maids of Honour Velazquez s magnum opus Created four years before his death it serves as an outstanding example of European baroque art Luca Giordano a contemporary Italian painter referred to it as the theology of painting 60 and in 1827 the president of the Royal Academy of Arts Sir Thomas Lawrence described it in a letter as the true philosophy of the art 61 However it is unclear as to who or what is the true subject of the picture 62 Is it the royal daughter or perhaps the painter himself The king and queen are seen reflected in a mirror on the back wall but the source of the reflection is a mystery are the royal pair standing in the viewer s space or does the mirror reflect the painting on which Velazquez is working Dale Brown says Velazquez may have conceived the faded image of the king and queen on the back wall as a foreshadowing of the fall of the Spanish Empire that was to gain momentum following Philip s death In the 1966 book Les Mots et Les Choses The Order of Things philosopher Michel Foucault devotes the 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 citation needed It is said the king painted the honorary Cross of Saint James of the Order of Santiago on the breast of the painter as it appears today on the canvas However Velazquez 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 court painter a belted knight without the consent of the commission established to inquire into the purity of his lineage The 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 Velazquez 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 citation needed Final years Edit Detail of Las Meninas Velazquez s self portrait Portrait of the eight year old Infanta Margarita Teresa in a Blue Dress 1659 There were essentially only two patrons of art in Spain the church and the art loving king and court Bartolome Esteban Murillo who toiled for a rich and powerful church left little means to pay for his burial while Velazquez lived and died in the enjoyment of a good salary and pension One of his final works was Las hilanderas The Spinners painted circa 1657 a depiction of Ovid s Fable of Arachne 18 The tapestry in the background is based on Titian s The Rape of Europa or more probably the copy that Rubens painted in Madrid 63 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 Velazquez 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 gray and black Velazquez s final portraits of the royal children are among his finest works and in the Infanta Margarita Teresa in a Blue Dress 64 the painter s personal style reached its high point shimmering spots of color on wide painting surfaces produce an almost impressionistic effect the viewer must stand at a suitable distance to get the impression of complete three dimensional spatiality His only surviving portrait of the delicate and sickly Prince Felipe Prospero 65 is remarkable for its combination of the sweet features of the child prince and his dog with a subtle sense of gloom The hope that was placed at that time in the sole heir to the Spanish crown is reflected in the depiction fresh red and white stand in contrast to late autumnal morbid colors A small dog with wide eyes looks at the viewer as if questioningly and the largely pale background hints at a gloomy fate the little prince was barely four years old when he died As in all of the artist s late paintings the handling of the colors is extraordinarily fluid and vibrant 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 Velazquez 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 This church was destroyed by the French around 1809 so his place of interment is now unknown 66 There was much difficulty in adjusting the tangled accounts outstanding between Velazquez and the treasury and it was not until 1666 after the death of King Philip that they were finally settled Style and technique EditIt is canonical to divide Velazquez s career by his two visits to Italy He 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 Although acquainted with all the Italian schools and a friend of the foremost painters of his day Velazquez was strong enough to withstand external influences and work out for himself the development of his own nature and his own principles of art He rejected the pomp that characterized the portraiture of other European courts and instead brought an even greater reserve to the understated formula for Habsburg portraiture established by Titian Antonio Mor and Alonso Sanchez Coello 67 He is known for using a rather limited palette but he mixed the available paints with great skill to achieve varying hues 68 His pigments were not significantly different from those of his contemporaries and he mainly employed azurite smalt vermilion red lake lead tin yellow and ochres 69 His early works were painted on canvases prepared with a red brown ground He adopted the use of light gray grounds during his first trip to Italy and continued using them for the rest of his life 70 The change resulted in paintings with greater luminosity and a generally cool silvery range of color 71 Few drawings are securely attributed to Velazquez 72 Although preparatory drawings for some of his paintings exist his method was to paint directly from life and x rays of his paintings reveal that he frequently made changes in his composition as a painting progressed 72 Legacy EditVelazquez was not prolific he is estimated to have produced between 110 and 120 known canvases 73 He produced no etchings or engravings and only a few drawings are attributed to him 74 Velazquez is the most influential figure in the history of Spanish portraiture 75 Although he had few immediate followers Spanish court painters such as his son in law Juan Bautista Martinez del Mazo and Juan Carreno de Miranda took inspiration from his work 75 Mazo closely mimicked his style and many paintings and copies by Mazo were formerly attributed to Velazquez 76 Velazquez s reputation languished in the eighteenth century when Spanish court portraiture was dominated by artists of foreign birth and training Towards the end of the century his importance was increasingly recognized by intellectuals close to the Spanish court an essay published In 1781 by Gaspar Melchor de Jovellanos said of Velazquez that when he died the glory of Painting in Spain died with him 77 In 1778 Goya made a set of etchings after paintings by Velazquez as part of a project by the Count of Floridablanca to produce prints of paintings in the Royal Collection 78 Goya s free copies reveal a searching engagement with the older master s work which remained a model for Goya for the rest of his career 79 Velazquez s work was little known outside of Spain until the nineteenth century 76 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 Velazquez 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 Velazquez s work in both landscape and portraiture citation needed Velazquez is often cited as a key influence on the art of Edouard Manet who is often considered the bridge between realism and impressionism Calling Velazquez the painter of painters 71 Manet admired the immediacy and vivid brushwork of Velazquez s work and built upon Velazquez s motifs in his own art 80 In the late nineteenth century artists such as James McNeill Whistler and John Singer Sargent were strongly influenced by Velazquez 18 Modern recreations of classics Edit The respect with which twentieth century painters regard Velazquez s work attests to its continuing importance Pablo Picasso paid homage to Velazquez in 1957 when he recreated Las Meninas in 44 variations in his characteristic style 81 Although Picasso was concerned that his reinterpretations of Velazquez s painting would be seen merely as copies rather than unique representations the enormous works including the largest he had produced since Guernica in 1937 obtained a position of importance in the canon of Spanish art citation needed Salvador Dali as with Picasso in anticipation of the tercentennial of Velazquez s death created in 1958 a work entitled Velazquez Painting the Infanta Margarita With the Lights and Shadows of His Own Glory The color scheme shows Dali s serious tribute to Velazquez 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 Dali s case citation needed The Anglo Irish painter Francis Bacon found Velazquez s portrait of Pope Innocent X to be one of the greatest portraits ever 82 He created several expressionist variations of this piece in the 1950s however Bacon s paintings presented a more gruesome image of Innocent One such famous variation entitled Figure with Meat 1954 shows the pope between two halves of a bisected cow citation needed Recent rediscoveries of Velazquez originals Edit In 2009 the Portrait of a Man in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art which had long been associated with the followers of Velazquez style of painting was cleaned and restored It was found to be by Velazquez himself and the features of the man match those of a figure in the painting the Surrender of Breda The newly cleaned canvas may therefore be a study for that painting Although the attribution to Velazquez is regarded as certain the identity of the sitter is still open to question Some art historians consider this new study to be a self portrait by Velazquez 83 In 2010 it was reported that a damaged painting long relegated to a basement of the Yale University Art Gallery might be an early work by Velazquez Thought to have been given to Yale in 1925 the painting has previously been attributed to the 17th century Spanish school Some scholars are prepared to attribute the painting to Velazquez though the Prado Museum in Madrid is reserving judgment The work which depicts the Virgin Mary being taught to read will be restored by conservators at Yale 84 85 In October 2011 it was confirmed by art historian Dr Peter Cherry of Trinity College Dublin through X ray analysis that a portrait found in the UK in the former collection of the 19th century painter Matthew Shepperson is a previously unknown work by Velazquez The portrait is of an unidentified man in his fifties or sixties who could possibly be Juan Mateos the Master of the Hunt for Velazquez s patron King Philip IV of Spain 86 The painting measures 47 x 39 cm and was sold at auction on December 7 2011 for 3 000 000 87 Descendants Edit Velazquez through his daughter Francisca de Silva Velazquez y Pacheco 1619 1658 is an ancestor of the Marquesses of Monteleone including Enriquetta Henrietta Casado de Monteleone 1725 1761 who in 1746 married Heinrich VI Count Reuss zu Kostritz 1707 1783 Through them are descended a number of European royalty among them King Felipe VI of Spain through his mother Sophia of Greece and Denmark 88 King Willem Alexander of the Netherlands King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden King Albert II of Belgium Hans Adam II Prince of Liechtenstein and Henri Grand Duke of Luxembourg 89 Popular culture EditVelazquez has been portrayed by Julian Villagran in a Spanish fantasy television series El ministerio del tiempo and is a recurring character in the series 90 Notes Edit British English v ɪ ˈ l ae s k w ɪ z 1 American English v e ˈ l ɑː s k eɪ s k w ɛ z k e s k ɛ s 1 2 3 4 Spanish ˈdjeɣo beˈla8ke8 References Edit a b Velazquez Diego dead link US and Velazquez Diego Lexico UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press permanent dead link Velazquez Random House Webster s Unabridged Dictionary Velazquez The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 5th ed HarperCollins Retrieved 18 October 2019 Velazquez Collins English Dictionary HarperCollins Retrieved 18 October 2019 Carr et al 2006 p 26 Samuel Edgar 17 June 1996 The Jewish ancestry of Velasquez Jewish Historical Studies 35 27 32 JSTOR 29779978 Newitt Malyn 2009 Portugal in European and World History London Reaktion Books p 98 ISBN 9781861895196 Otaka Yasujiro September 2000 An Aspiration Sealed Special Issue Art History and the Jew Studies in Western Art Retrieved 2007 12 08 Ingram Kevin 1999 Diego Velazquez s Secret History Boletin del Museo del Prado XVII 35 69 85 Comez Ramos Rafael 2002 La parentela de Velazquez Laboratorio de Arte 15 383 388 Carr et al 2006 p 53 Harris 1982 p 9 Carr et al 2006 p 28 Carr et al 2006 p 14 Juana and Diego Velazquez Marriage Profile Marriage about com Archived from the original on 2011 10 25 Retrieved December 22 2010 Carr et al 2006 p 27 Carr et al 2006 p 29 a b c d e f g h i j Sanchez Alfonso E Perez January 1 2003 Velazquez Diego Grove Art Online Carr et al 2006 pp 122 126 Carr et al 2006 pp 28 29 Carr et al 2006 p 142 Carr et al 2006 p 130 a b c Carr et al 2006 p 245 Carr et al 2006 p 144 Carr et al 2006 pp 29 245 Harris 1982 p 57 Harris 1982 pp 12 200 a b Harris 1982 p 12 Harris 1982 p 61 Carr et al 2006 p 31 Ortega y Gasset 1953 p 37 Carr et al 2006 p 32 Harris 1982 p 74 Harris 1982 p 73 Carr et al 2006 p 33 a b Carr et al 2006 p 157 Carr et al 2006 p 147 Asturias and Bardi 1969 p 93 Carr et al 2006 p 182 a b Carr et al 2006 p 38 Carr et al 2006 pp 38 41 Carr et al 2006 pp 164 180 Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Juan Martinez Montanes Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Carr et al 2006 p 20 Portus 2004 p 25 Carr et al 2006 p 212 Ortega y Gasset 1953 p 45 Carr et al 2006 p 42 a b Carr et al 2006 p 36 Asturias and Bardi 1969 p 84 Harris 1982 pp 24 25 Harris 1982 pp 25 27 87 Harris 1982 pp 25 28 The manumission document was discovered by Jennifer Montagu See Burlington Magazine volume 125 1983 pp 683 4 Harris 1982 pp 141 143 Ortega y Gasset 1953 p 38 Leon Coleccion Museo Nacional del Prado www museodelprado es a b Carr et al 2006 p 247 Carr et al 2006 p 46 Carr et al 2006 p 47 Asturias and Bardi 1969 p 106 Gower Ronald Sutherland 1900 Sir Thomas Lawrence London Paris amp New York Goupil amp co p 83 Carr et al 2006 p 48 Bird Wendy The Bobbin and the Distaff Archived 2011 08 11 at the Wayback Machine Apollo 2007 11 01 Retrieved on May 28 2009 Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien Infantin Margarita Teresa 1651 1673 in blauem Kleid Diego Rodriguez de Silva y Velazquez 1659 Inv No GG 2130 Archived 2013 11 01 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on January 27 2014 Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien Infant Philipp Prosper 1657 1661 Diego Rodriguez de Silva y Velazquez 1659 Inv No GG 319 Archived 2014 10 26 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on January 27 2014 Goodman Al September 7 1999 ARTS ABROAD A Furor for Velazquez His Art but Also His Bones The New York Times Carr et al 2006 p 30 McKim Smith et al 1988 Diego Velazquez ColourLex Carr et al 2006 pp 71 78 a b Carr et al 2006 p 79 a b McKim Smith Gridley December 1979 On Velazquez s Working Method The Art Bulletin 61 4 589 603 Vogel Carol September 10 2009 An Old Spanish Master Emerges From Grime The New York Times Retrieved September 11 2009 Jonathan Brown this country s leading Velazquez expert Velazquez was a painter who measured out his genius in thimblefuls His output was so small that depending on who s counting Mr Brown estimates there are only 110 to 120 known canvases by the artist Harris 1982 p 178 a b Portus 2004 p 57 a b Harris 1982 p 183 Portus 2004 p 200 Portus 2004 p 201 Portus 2004 pp 204 207 Schjeldahl Peter November 10 2002 The Spanish Lesson Manet s gift from Velazquez The New Yorker Retrieved May 25 2019 Harris 1982 p 177 Arya Rina 2009 Painting the Pope An Analysis of Francis Bacon s Study After Velazquez s Portrait of Innocent X Literature and Theology 23 1 33 50 Velazquez Rediscovered Past Exhibitions the Metropolitan Museum of Art Archived from the original on 2010 07 09 Retrieved 2010 04 12 Tremlett Giles July 1 2010 Yale basement yields Spanish treasure a possible Velazquez masterpiece The Guardian UK Retrieved December 22 2010 Yale uncovers Velazquez in basement storage CBC News July 3 2010 Archived from the original on July 6 2010 Retrieved December 22 2010 Jury Louise 27 October 2011 Portrait in hoard sent to auction revealed to be 3million Velazquez London Evening Standard Archived from the original on 29 October 2011 Retrieved October 27 2011 Rediscovered Velazquez painting sold for 3m at auction BBC News 7 December 2011 Retrieved September 29 2012 Relationship between Queen Sofia of Spain and Velazquez Europeandynasties com Retrieved December 22 2010 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2008 05 16 Retrieved 2009 07 19 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Julian Villagran es Diego de Velazquez en la serie El Ministerio del Tiempo RTVE es in Spanish 2015 01 29 Retrieved 2021 03 10 Sources EditAsturias Miguel Angel and P M Bardi 1969 L opera completa di Velazquez Milano Rizzoli OCLC 991877516 Carr Dawson W Xavier Bray and Diego Velazquez 2006 Velazquez London National Gallery ISBN 1857093038 Harris Enriqueta 1982 Velazquez Ithaca N Y Cornell University Press ISBN 0801415268 McKim Smith G Andersen Bergdoll G Newman R 1988 Examining Velazquez Yale University Press ISBN 0300036159 Ortega y Gasset Jose 1953 Velazquez New York Random House OCLC 989292513 Portus Javier 2004 The Spanish Portrait from El Greco to Picasso exposition Museo nacional del Prado 20 october 2004 6 february 2005 London Scala ISBN 185759374X Further reading EditBrown Dale 1969 The World of Velazquez 1599 1660 New York Time Life Books ISBN 0 8094 0252 1 Brown Jonathan 1978 Images and Ideas in Seventeenth Century Spanish Painting Princeton University Press Princeton New Jersey ISBN 0 691 03941 0 Brown Jonathan 1986 Velazquez Painter and Courtier Yale University Press New Haven ISBN 0 300 03466 0 Brown Jonathan 1988 Enemies of Flattery Velazquez Portraits of Philip IV in Rotberg Robert I and Rabb Theodore K Art and History Images and Their Meaning Cambridge Cambridge University Press Brown Jonathan 2008 Collected Writings on Velazquez CEEH amp Yale University Press New Haven ISBN 978 0 300 14493 2 Calvo Serraller Francisco 1999 Velazquez Madrid Electa ISBN 84 8156 203 3 Davies David and Enriqueta Harris 1996 Velazquez in Seville National Gallery of Scotland Edinburgh ISBN 0 300 06949 9 Dominguez Ortiz A Gallego J amp Perez Sanchez A E 1989 Velazquez New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 9780810939066 Elizabeth McGrath and Jean Michel Massing The Slave in European Art The Warburg Institute 2012 Enriqueta Harris resalta la pasion britanica por Velazquez en un simposio en Sevilla PDF El Pais Digital Archived from the original PDF on October 24 2004 Retrieved April 9 2005 Erenkrantz Justin R The Variations on Past Masters The Mask and the Mirror Accessed on April 10 2005 Goldberg Edward L Velazquez in Italy Painters Spies and Low Spaniards The Art Bulletin Vol 74 No 3 September 1992 pp 453 456 Kahr Madlyn Millner 1976 Velazquez The Art of Painting Harper amp Row Knox Giles Velazquez s King Philip IV of Spain from the Frick Collection Masterpiece in Residence series Dallas and New York Meadows Museum SMU in association with Scala Arts Publishers Inc 2022 ISBN 978 1 78551 444 9 Moser Wolf 2011 Diego de Silva Velazquez Das Werk und der Maler 2 vols Edition Saint Georges Lyon ISBN 978 3 00 032155 9 Pacheco Francisco and Palomino Antonio 2018 Lives of Velazquez Getty Publications ISBN 978 1 60606 5884 Passuth Laszlo Mas perenne que el bronce Velazquez y la corte de Felipe IV Titulo original A harmadik udvarmester Noguer y Caralt Editores 2000 Prater Andreas 2007 Venus ante el espejo CEEH ISBN 978 84 936060 0 8 Salort Pons Salvador Velazquez en Italia Fundacion de Apoyo a la Historia del Arte Hispanico Madrid 2002 ISBN 84 932891 1 6 Stratton Pruitt Suzanne L ed 2002 The Cambridge Companion to Velazquez Cambridge University Press Velazquez Diego 1995 Enciclopedia Hispanica Barcelona Encyclopaedia Britannica Publishers ISBN 1 56409 007 8 Wolf Norbert 1998 Diego Velazquez 1599 1660 the face of Spain Taschen Koln ISBN 3 8228 6511 7 External links Edit Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Velazquez Diego Rodriguez de Silva y Wikimedia Commons has media related to Diego Velazquez 46 artworks by or after Diego Velazquez at the Art UK site Velazquez works at the Web Gallery of Art Velazquez at Artcyclopedia com 202 paintings by Diego Velazquez at DiegoVelazquez org Diego Velazquez at WikiPaintings org Diego Velazquez s Online Exhibition at Owlstand com Diego Velazquez Collection of resources and illustrated pigment analyses ColourLex Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Diego Velazquez amp oldid 1168140557, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.