Object data
oil on panel
support: height 73.9 cm × width 56 cm
outer size: depth 9.5 cm (support incl. frame)
Peter Paul Rubens (workshop of)
c. 1635
oil on panel
support: height 73.9 cm × width 56 cm
outer size: depth 9.5 cm (support incl. frame)
…; collection Jacques Meyers (?-1721), Rotterdam;1 his sale, Rotterdam (auction house not known), 9 September 1722, no. 76 (‘Christus, dragende zyn Kruis naer den Berg Kalvarien, door P.P. Rubbens, h. 2 v. 3 en een halven d. br. 1 v. 9 en een halven d. [74.5 x 55 cm]’), fl. 155, to Hendrik van Heteren (1672-1749), The Hague;2 his son, Adriaan Leonard van Heteren (1724-1800), The Hague, (‘Een stuk verbeeldende Christus, dragende het Kruis na den berg van Calvarien, zeer vol beelden, door Petrus Paulus Rubens, h. 28 en een half d., br. 21 en een half d. [74.5 x 56.2 cm] P.’);3 his third cousin and godson, Adriaan Leonard van Heteren Gevers (1794-1866), Rotterdam, (‘Pierre Paul Rubbens. Superbe ébauche, représentant Jésus succombant sous le fardeau de la Croix en allant au Mont Calvaire. Le grand tableau peint d’après cette ébauche se trouvait autrefois dans L’Église de l’Abaye de Afflingen de l’Ordre des Benedictins à quatre lieues de Bruxelles du coté de Gand, bois, h. 28½ b. 21½ [74.5 x 56.2 cm]’);4 from whom, fl. 100,000, with 136 other paintings en bloc (known as the ‘Kabinet van Heteren Gevers’), to the museum, by decree of Lodewijk Napoleon, King of Holland, and through the mediation of his father Dirk Cornelis Gevers (1763-1839), 8 June 1809;5 on loan to the Bonnefantenmuseum, Maastricht, 2004-11
Object number: SK-A-344
Copyright: Public domain
Peter Paul Rubens (Siegen 1577 - Antwerp 1640)
Peter Paul Rubens was born on the eve of the feast day of the saints Peter and Paul (after whom he was named) – on 28 June 1577 – in Siegen, Westphalia, the son of a Protestant lawyer Jan (1530-1588), who with his wife Maria (1538-1608) had left their native Antwerp in 1568. He died a long professed Catholic in Antwerp on 30 May 1640 after an immensely successful career as a painter, from which he amassed a fortune, and as a public servant in the service of the Archduchess Isabella, the Governor of the Spanish Netherlands, and of his sovereign, her nephew, King Philip IV of Spain.
His oeuvre includes well over a thousand paintings – partly made possible by a well-organized studio – supplemented by an extensive group of drawings and of engravings after his work, the production of which he supervised. Much of his output was of religious subjects, but he also specialized in mythologies; he was an innovative landscape painter and a sympathetic portraitist especially of friends and members of his family. Four elaborate tapestry series were designed by him, and he occasionally followed the then current Antwerp practice of collaborating with other independent artists.
Rubens’s protean genius encompassed other fields: he was well versed in classical literature (like other educated men of his time) and in archaeology; he published a book on contemporary Genoese architecture and contributed to architectural design in Antwerp. An avid collector (and successful dealer) of paintings, classical sculpture, gems, and drawings by other masters, he was an expert iconographer, and a regular contributor of designs for frontispieces. Recent research has shown he was an active investor in property and a generous financier.
Three artists are later recorded as his teachers in Antwerp, where his widowed, and now Catholic mother had returned, of which the last, the learned Otto van Veen (1556-1629) was the most influential. In May 1600, two years after he had become a master in the Antwerp guild of St Luke, he went to Italy, from where he returned at the end of 1608. There he had been employed as court painter to Vincenzo I Gonzaga, Duke of Mantua (1562-1612), for whom he acted as a diplomatic courier to King Philip III of Spain (1578-1621) in 1603. Beside his study of classical and Italian art, he executed large-scale altarpieces in Rome, Mantua and Genoa.
The archducal sovereigns of the Spanish Netherlands appointed him their court painter in 1609; the following year he married Isabella Brant (1591-1626) with whom he had three children. His reputation and clientele became international; after completing the decoration (destroyed) of the aisles and galleries of the Antwerp Jesuit Church, he was commissioned by Marie de Médicis, Queen Mother of France, to paint a cycle of her life (Musée du Louvre) and that of her deceased husband (never completed) for her Luxembourg Palace in Paris. In the 1630s he painted a cycle for the ceiling of the Banqueting Hall in London (in situ) for King Charles I of Great Britain; for the city of Antwerp, he designed the decorations for the Cardinal-Infante’s Joyous Entry into Antwerp and for King Philip IV of Spain, an extensive series (chiefly Museo Nacional del Prado) for the Torre de la Parada, near Madrid. He was ennobled by Philip IV in 1624 and knighted by Charles I in 1630.
Rubens’s public service (conducted in secret early on) for the archduchess began in the early 1620s and became increasingly important. Following a visit to Madrid, he was engaged in high-level diplomatic negotiations in London in 1629-30. Having attended the exiled Dowager Queen Marie de Médicis in the southern Netherlands he largely retired from such service in 1632, two years after his second marriage to Helena Fourment, with whom he had five children.
REFERENCES
C. Ruelens and M. Rooses (eds.), Correspondance de Rubens et documents epistolaires concernant sa vie et ses oeuvres, 6 vols., Antwerp 1887-1909; M. Rooses, L’oeuvre de P.P. Rubens. Histoire et description de ses tableaux et dessins, 5 vols., Antwerp 1886-92; R.S. Magurn, The Letters of Sir Peter Paul Rubens, Cambridge 1955; Corpus Rubenianum Ludwig Burchard in 29 parts and multiple volumes of which the last are forthcoming, 1968-; M. Jaffé, Rubens. Catalogo Completo, Milan 1989; J.S. Held, The Oil Sketches of Peter Paul Rubens: A Critical Catalogue, 2 vols., Princeton 1980
The museum sketch – on a composite support of two pieces of oak timber from the Polish/Baltic area and available for use from 1627 – has been accepted as the work of Peter Paul Rubens executed in preparation for the high altarpiece of the church of Sint-Peter en Pauluskerk in the prestigious Benedictine abbey at Afflighem in southern Brabant.6 Rubens was in discussion about the commission in 1634 and the altarpiece was delivered in 1637; it is now in the Koninklijke Musea voor Schone Kunsten van België, Brussels. Reservations about the authenticity of the Amsterdam sketch (early harboured by the present author) were first aired in 2007, when the catalogue of Rubens: A Genius at Work attributed it to Rubens and studio; the entry by Peeters and Dubois proposed that studio participation was confined to ‘the figures in the background’, and that the assistant ‘was perhaps assigned the task of finishing the sketch begun by the master’.7
In the present work there is a difference in degree of finish between the troop of horsemen at the head of the procession and the group of the two thieves and their escorts at the rear (in the foreground). But it seems likely that only one hand was responsible for the work; and it is here contended that being largely no more than facile in his handling of the brush, the artist should not be identified as Rubens. Clearly he was familiar with Rubens’s work, but he could endow the principal figures with facial expressions little more than feeble and was clumsy at rendering muscles (e.g. the back of the man supporting the cross). Further his control of the formal configuration of the composition was so weak that he could only include the arm of the bad thief’s escort.
Two other sketches also associated with Rubens’s preparation for the commission, in the Vienna Akademie8 and the Brussels museum9, are no longer considered autograph. Although very different in style, it seems possible that they were also the work of studio hands as they followed Rubens’s drafting sessions.
Only one extant modello for the altarpiece, a large-scale sketch in the Statens Museum for Kunst, Copenhagen (inv. no. 1856), is generally agreed to be autograph, as can in part be inferred from technical photographs. This is rapidly drawn and brushed mostly in grisaille in at least two phases.10 In marked contrast to the present painting is the extensive use of underdrawing in black chalk. In many respects, as Verhave and Wadum have shown, in its first phase (before the introduction of the mounted commander), the design of the Copenhagen modello was the same or very similar to that in the Rijksmuseum work. This latter is best understood as partially independent, but chiefly inspired by Rubens as he worked on the Afflighem commission. The altarpiece was installed on 8 April 1637; it may have been available along with the preparatory work, for some time in the studio.
The main source of inspiration for the author of the Rijksmuseum painting, most likely an advanced pupil or assistant in the studio, was the composition as first drafted by Rubens in the Copenhagen sketch; he seems to have had access also to other preparatory work as well as knowledge of the altarpiece itself. The attitude of St Veronica, in which Held found much to praise,11 is to a degree independent of Rubens, but the gesture of wiping Christ’s forehead was inspired by the motif devised in the Copenhagen sketch. From this work is also derived the pose of the child behind Veronica, although the artist’s first idea (as more outstretched) follows that in the prototype of the Vienna sketch. For the configuration of St John supporting the Virgin, the source seems to have been first the arrangement as recorded in the Brussels sketch (with the saint’s arm over the Virgin’s), and then the solution finally arrived at in the altarpiece itself. The soldier restraining the Virgin is a motif derived from that set out in the Vienna sketch. The probable pentiment in the bottom left of the Rijksmuseum picture suggests that the first idea was inspired by either of the formulations preserved in the Brussels or Vienna sketches and showed the group of guards and prisoners moving towards the right (the white cloth binding the bad thief’s arms behind his back is still visible, as is in black and white photographs the image of the soldier pushing the thief along from behind). Then Rubens’s proposal in the Copenhagen modello was selected and the group was switched round. But by placing the foremost Roman soldier (whose left arm, staff and leg are clearly afterthoughts) too near the centre, the artist left insufficient room to show the whole group and was only able to include the left arm of the soldier escorting the bad thief.
With its echoes of Raphael’s Spasimo di Sicilia of 151512 in the gesture of the Virgin, in the mounted, Roman ensign and to a lesser extent in the mounted commander, Rubens’s rising, in-depth design is highly original, as is the prominent foreground placement of the thieves at the rear of the procession. An ambiguous and thus controversial sentence in Phalesius’s chronicle of the Afflighem monastery of 1637, in which the history of the commission is briefly mentioned,13 has been interpreted by some scholars to mean that Rubens was asked (in October 1634) to alter his first proposal for the altarpiece;14 the Rijksmuseum sketch has been identified with this supposed first proposal,15 but such a thesis would no longer be sustainable if our contention concerning its status is correct.
Phalesius gave the altarpiece’s subject (using the genitive) ‘Christi Domini Baiulantis crucem’ (Christ the Lord carrying the Cross) and (in the accusative) ‘Christum Staurophorum Cruci succumbentem’ (The cross-bearing Christ falling under the cross). Following tradition,16 Rubens relies chiefly on the account given in Luke 23:26-27 and 32, which not only describes how Simon of Cyrene took up the cross behind Christ, but accounts for the presence of the ‘Daughters of Jerusalem’ and the ‘two other, malefactors led with him to be put to death’. But the main emphasis is placed on the legendary St Veronica, who is wiping blood from Christ’s brow with her veil or with what is sometimes described as the Holy Handkerchief.
Gregory Martin, 2022
J.R. Judson, Corpus Rubenianum Ludwig Burchard, VI: The Passion of Christ, London 2000, no. 19C (as by Rubens)
1809, p. 61, no. 264; 1841, p. 45, no. 270; 1843, p. 52, no. 269 (sound); 1853, p. 24, no. 240 [fl.12,000]; 1858, p. 119, no. 266; 1864, p. 128, no. 275; 1880, p. 414, no. 483; 1885, p. 72, no. 483; 1887, p. 144, no. 1221; 1903, p. 230, no. 2065; 1934, p. 249, no. 2065; 1960, p. 269, no. 2065; 1976, p. 483, no. A 344
G. Martin, 2022, 'workshop of Peter Paul Rubens, Christ on the Way to Calvary, c. 1635', in Flemish Paintings in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.5317
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