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A brilliant colorist and masterful storyteller, Dutch mannerist
Joachim Wtewael (1566-1638) wielded a remarkably skilled brush and
the technical ability to show it off in intricate compositions. He
took inspiration from a wide range of biblical and mythological
sources to create imaginative, often quite erotic scenes. While
such pictures were prized in Wtewael's time, more recently they
were hidden away--behind other paintings, in leather folders on
bookshelves, and in the reserves of great museums. This richly
illustrated volume brings together more than fifty of Wtewael's
finest paintings and drawings, from a small jewel-like picture on
copper depicting Mars and Venus to large-scale mannerist showpieces
such as The Martyrdom of Saint Sebastian and Perseus and Andromeda.
A pillar of the Utrecht community, Wtewael was engaged in business,
religion, and politics as well as art. He adopted the exotic
mannerist style, full of artifice and inventive manipulation, and
continued to be fascinated by the challenge of creating
sophisticated variations well into his maturity, when other Dutch
artists had turned to naturalism. This book explores Wtewael's
amazingly refined and detailed paintings and drawings, shedding
light on his reputation, his life, and the conflicted times--marked
by iconoclasm and strife--in which he thrived. Exhibition schedule:
*Centraal Museum Utrecht, February 21-May 25, 2015*National Gallery
of Art, Washington, June 28-October 4, 2015* Sarah Campbell Blaffer
Foundation at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, November 1,
2015-January 31, 2016
What a shock it must have been for the Utrecht painters Hendrick
ter Brugghen, Gerard van Honthorst and Dirck van Baburen when they
first encountered the breathtaking and unconventional paintings of
Caravaggio in Rome. This volume shows impressively how the young
artists individually explored this role model and thereby developed
their own individual style. In around 1600 Rome was the centre of
the world. Attracted by Caravaggio's spectacular success, young
artists from all over Europe converged on the bus tling metropolis.
The up-and-coming painters studied the same works, discussed
matters with each other and used Caravaggio's style to develop
their own individual pictorial language. Tracing the careers of the
three most important Utrecht Caravaggists, the authors describe the
atmosphere of this artistic mood of renewal. Only in a comparison
with their European fellow artists does it become evident how
strongly the Dutch tradition, with its love of merciless realism,
influenced the creative work of the Utrecht painters.
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