Object data
oil on canvas
support: height 308 cm × width 223 cm × thickness 3.5 cm
outer size: height 317.5 cm × width 232.5 cm × depth 11 cm (support incl. transport frame)
Gaspar de Crayer
c. 1640 - c. 1650
oil on canvas
support: height 308 cm × width 223 cm × thickness 3.5 cm
outer size: height 317.5 cm × width 232.5 cm × depth 11 cm (support incl. transport frame)
…; the dealer Van Eijck, The Hague; from whom, fl. 5,500, with SK-A-74, by Willem I, King of the Netherlands, for the museum, 18181
Object number: SK-A-75
Copyright: Public domain
Gaspar de Crayer (Antwerp 1584 - Ghent 1669)
The figure painter, Gaspar de Crayer, was born in Antwerp, the son of his homonymous father, and baptized in the Onze-Lieve-Vrouwekerk on 18 November 1584. It is not known who his master was. He may have been apprenticed in Brussels, for he became a master in the Brussels guild of painters, gold beaters and glaziers in 1607 and remained based there until he settled in Ghent in 1664, in which city’s Dominican Church he was buried on 27 January 1669.
During his long career De Crayer took on fourteen apprentices, the first in 1610. His extant oeuvre, including oil sketches and drawings, consists of some 277 items. There are early records of a further 118 works apparently no longer extant. There was no decrease in his activity as he advanced in years; on the contrary, it has been calculated that the number of works executed in the last twenty years of his career amounts to nearly half of his extant production.
De Crayer specialized in religious works, often scenes of martyrdom of relatively obscure saints as altarpieces for village churches. But he also worked for the Benedictines at the prestigious Afflighem Abbey. Indeed he received commissions from the main churches and religious orders, not to speak of other notable centres in the southern Netherlands – in Antwerp, Brussels and Ghent. His most important profane commission was the decoration of the 'Arcus Caroli', the triumphal arch erected for the Joyous Entry of the Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand into Ghent on 28 January 1635.
Although De Crayer had earlier painted portraits of the archducal couple Albert and Isabella in Brussels, he was not appointed court painter until the accession of Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand as governor, a post he retained during the rule of the Archduke Leopold-Wilhelm (1647-56). The accompanying fiscal privileges were honoured after he moved to Ghent in 1664. He declined an invitation to participate in the decoration of the Oranjezaal in the Huis ten Bosch in 1649.
De Crayer seems to have early mastered a fairly straightforward method of working; there is evidence of his having executed head studies and compositional drawings. There is only the word of the Cardinal-Infante that his relations with Peter Paul Rubens (1577-1640) were not good; certainly the art of the elder man influenced De Crayer, as did that of Anthony van Dyck (1599-1641). But against these powerful influences De Crayer sustained his own idiosyncratic, easily legible style that did not result from any dependence on them. His oeuvre shows affinities with the followers of the Bolognese Annibale Carracci (1560-1609), and De Crayer is known to have copied a work by Guido Reni (1575-1642) early in his career. Whether these affinities are fortuitous, or due to some further indirect contact, remains as yet to be determined.
REFERENCES
H. Vlieghe, Gaspar de Crayer: Sa vie et ses oeuvres, 2 vols., Brussels 1972, I, pp. 33-75; H. Vlieghe, ‘Gaspar de Crayer: Addenda et Corrigenda’, Gentse Bijdragen 25 (1979-80), pp. 158-208
The four Gospels give accounts of Christ's descent from the cross: Matthew 27:57-59, Mark 15:42-46, Luke 23:50-53 and John 19:38-39.2 All identify Joseph of Arimathaea, ‘an honourable counsellor’ and ‘a good man and just’, as the believer who obtained Pilate’s permission to take down Christ’s body from the cross. According to St John, Joseph was accompanied by Nicodemus, who, like him, was a member of the council of Jews in Jerusalem. They were joined by those followers of Jesus who had been present at his crucifixion: the Virgin, and the three Maries: Mary Magdalen, Mary Cleophas, and Mary Salome. Gaspar de Crayer, in the Rijksmuseum Descent from the Cross, places John on the ladder and assigns to Joseph the central role of taking the main brunt of supporting Christ’s body. He introduced a youth carrying a basin, at the left, and an assistant to John, above.
In the gestures of the Virgin and St Mary Magdalen, De Crayer was here probably inspired by Peter Paul Rubens’s Descent from the Cross in Antwerp Onze-Lieve-Vrouwekerk of circa 1611-14.3 The Virgin is a weeping, standing spectator, thus following Franciscan exegesis, inspired by the John 19:26, which records that she was ‘standing by the cross’, and epitomized in the popular thirteenth-century poem Stabat Mater Dolorosa.4 Like Rubens, De Crayer places the main emphasis on Mary Magdalen, whose gesture ‘alludes to the sinful world reaching out to be saved by Christ’s sacrifice’.5 Rubens had also given John a similar role on the ladder in his altarpieces formerly at Kalisz6 and in St Petersburg (where the features are very similar);7 in the altarpiece at Valenciennes,8 he is seen on a lower rung and from the back.
In De Crayer’s only other extant depiction of the subject, his early altarpiece in the church of Saint-Martin at Millau,9 the pose of Christ depends on Rubens’s formulation in the altarpiece now in the Musée des Beaux-Arts, Lille10. The pose in the Rijksmuseum picture, however, does not appear to depend on Rubens; rather it refers back to that developed by Danielle da Volterra (1509-1566) in the Roman church of SS Trinità dei Monti, which was known to Rubens,11 but which De Crayer could only have been aware of at second hand.
Vlieghe dates the Rijksmuseum picture to the decade after circa 1638. The composition is far more compact than that at Millau, nevertheless he used the same, untraced, drawing or modello for the youth on the left carrying the basin who is similarly placed in that composition. Also, the model for Nicodemus seems to have been similar. As Vlieghe pointed out, the model for Joseph of Arimathaea is identical to that of an executioner in the Martyrdom of St Blaise at Vlamertinge;12 De Crayer would have used the same untraced drawing or modello for it. The model for the Virgin, as Vlieghe also pointed out, was the same for the St Monica in the Virgin and Child Venerated by Saints of 1646 in the Alte Pinakothek, Munich,13 though in the latter picture the figure faces left and her hair is adorned with pearls. The physiognomy of Christ as it here appears was often deployed by De Crayer from the 1640s: it makes an early appearance in the Miraculous Draught of Fishes in the Koninklijk Museum voor Schone Kunsten, Brussels, which was finished in 1644.14 Several small pentiments in the museum painting can be detected by the naked eye.
For a discussion as to whether this Descent from the Cross and De Crayer’s Adoration of the Shepherds (SK-A-74) should be regarded as pendants and speculations about their function, see the entry on the latter.
A copy was acquired for the Jesuit Church in Auberg, Bavaria, in 1672.
Gregory Martin, 2022
H. Vlieghe, Gaspar de Crayer: Sa vie et ses oeuvres, 2 vols., Brussels 1972, I, no. A106, II, pl. 103
1832, p. 15, no. 60; 1843, p. 13, no. 62 (canvas damaged); 1853, p. 8, no. 56 (fl. 2,000); 1880, pp. 395-96, no. 463; 1904, p. 77, no. 737; 1934, p. 76, no. 737; 1976, p. 181, no. A 75
G. Martin, 2022, 'Gaspar de Crayer, The Descent from the Cross, c. 1640 - c. 1650', in Flemish Paintings in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.6665
(accessed 13 November 2024 05:53:52).