Pieter Meulener
"Battle scene".
Oil on copper.
Signed with monogram at the bottom.
Measurements: 38 x 57 cm; 57 x 72 cm (frame).
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DESCRIPTION
PIETER MEULENER (Antwerp, 1602-1654).
"Battle scene".
Oil on copper.
Signed with monogram at the bottom.
Measurements: 38 x 57 cm; 57 x 72 cm (frame).
In a wide Flemish landscape of panoramic character, a scene of equestrian combat is developed, representative of the mastery of Pieter Meulener in the genre of battles. In the foreground, an assailant armed with rifle or musket points with determination towards a rider who, surprised, opens his mouth in a gesture of fury, accentuating the dramatic tension of the moment. All around them, the army advances swiftly along the dirt road, while some appear already fallen from their mounts or are confused among the dust and the tumult of combat.
Behind a wooded strip, where the sniper is located, other hidden figures are insinuated, preparing an ambush, while the groups of cavalry are dispersed by the terrain.
The landscape, of cold tones and misty atmosphere, responds to the Flemish taste of the 17th century, with wide skies, distant horizons and a careful transition of lights that gives depth to the composition.
The work combines the narrative energy of Flemish Baroque with the descriptive sense inherited from the landscape tradition of Rubens and Snayers, offering a vibrant and dynamic vision of war on horseback.
Pieter Meulener was the son of Jan de Meuleneer or Molenaer, who is recorded as having been enrolled in the Antwerp painters' guild in 1598 and who died there in 1645, but of whom no works are known. In 1631 Pieter joined the guild as the son of a master, possibly in order to marry as an independent master, although it is likely that he continued to work in his father's workshop for some time, as the first signed works do not appear until years later, to be mostly between 1642 and 1654, at which time Meulener must have acquired a good reputation as a painter of battles and landscapes.
In some of his early works, particularly those of some documentary value, such as The Entry of the Cardinal-Infante Don Ferdinand of Austria into Antwerp on April 17, 1635 (Amsterdam, Instituut Collectie Nederland), he still makes use of abruptly raised landscape backgrounds in the manner of Sebastian Vrancx, with a very high horizon line to allow an almost topographical view of the terrain, but imaginary combats are more common in his production, such as the seven belonging to the Museo del Prado, conceived with mere decorative value and with a more natural point of view, low horizons and integration of the figures in the landscape with which they seem to merge.
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