35315924-(100).jpg
35315924-(01).jpg
35315924-(73).jpg
35315924-(68).jpg
35315924-(67).jpg

19th century Spanish school, following 17th century

Auction Lot 35315924
19th century Spanish school, following 17th century Madrilenian models.
‘Landscape with characters on horseback’.
Oil on canvas.
With faults and repainting. Damage by xylophages.
Measurements: 150 x 98 x 2 cm.

Estimated Value : 650 - 700 €
End of Auction: 29 May 2024 17:58
Remaining time: 9 days 14:04:15
Processing lot please standby
Next bid: 350

BID HISTORY

DESCRIPTION

19th century Spanish school, following 17th century Madrilenian models.
‘Landscape with characters on horseback’.
Oil on canvas.
With faults and repainting. Damage by xylophages.
Measurements: 150 x 98 x 2 cm.

The work shows an idealised landscape with the usual characteristics of the 17th-century Madrid school. The Madrid school emerged around the court of first Philip IV and then Charles II, and developed throughout the 17th century. Analysts of this school have insisted on considering its development as a result of the binding power of the court; what is truly decisive is not the place of birth of the different artists, but the fact that they were educated and worked around and for a nobiliary and religious clientele based next to the royals. This allowed and favoured a stylistic unity, even though there were the logical divergences due to the personalities of the artists involved. The origins of the Madrid school are linked to the accession to the throne of Philip IV, a monarch who made Madrid an artistic centre for the first time. This was an awakening of the nationalist conscience as it allowed a liberation from the previous Italianate moulds and a leap from the last echoes of Mannerism to Tenebrism. This was the first step taken by the school, which gradually progressed towards a more autochthonous Baroque language linked to the political, religious and cultural conceptions of the Habsburg monarchy, before dying out with the first outbreaks of Rococo in the work of the last of its representatives, A. Palomino. The techniques most commonly used by these painters were oil and fresco. Stylistically, the starting point was naturalism with a notable capacity for synthesis, leading in due course to the allegorical and formal complexity characteristic of the decorative Baroque. These artists showed a great concern for the study of light and colour, as we can see here, initially emphasising the interplay between extreme tones characteristic of tenebrism, which were later replaced by a more exalted and luminous colouring. They received and assimilated Italian, Flemish and Velázquez influences. The clientele determined the fact that the subject matter was reduced almost exclusively to portraits and religious paintings.

COMMENTS

This lot can be seen at the Setdart Madrid Gallery located at C/Velázquez, 7.

HELP


Bidding by Phone 932 463 241

Buy in Setdart

Sell in Setdart

Payments

Logistics

Remember that bids placed in the last few minutes may extend the end of the auction,
thus allowing enough time for other interested users to place their bids. Remember to refresh your browser in the last minutes of any auction to have all bidding information fully updated.

Also in the last 3 minutes, if you wish, you can place
consecutive bids to reach the reserve price.

Newsletter

Would you like to receive our newsletter?

Setdart sends, weekly and via e-mail, a newsletter with the most important news. If you have not yet requested to receive our newsletter, you can do so by filling in the following form.


SETDART ONLINE SL, as data controller, will treat your data in order to send you our newsletter with commercial news about our services. You can access, rectify and delete your data, as well as exercise other rights by consulting the additional and detailed information on data protection in our privacy policy.