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Europe 1300 - 1800
Course: Europe 1300 - 1800 > Unit 9
Lesson 3: Flanders- Peter Paul Rubens, Mulay Ahmad
- Peter Paul Rubens, Elevation of the Cross
- Rubens, Elevation of the Cross
- Rubens, The Rape of the Daughters of Leucippus
- Rubens, The Presentation of the Portrait of Marie de' Medici
- Rubens, The Presentation of the Portrait of Marie de' Medici
- Rubens, Arrival (or Disembarkation) of Marie de Medici at Marseilles, Medici Cycle
- Peter Paul Rubens, The Apotheosis of Henry IV and the Proclamation of the Regency of Marie de’ Médici
- Rubens, Venus, Mars and Cupid
- Rubens, the Consequences of War
- Rubens, Rubens and Isabella Brant in the Honeysuckle Bower
- Anthony van Dyck, Charles I at the Hunt
- Anthony van Dyck, Samson and Delilah
- Baroque art in Flanders
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Rubens, The Presentation of the Portrait of Marie de' Medici
Peter Paul Rubens, The Presentation of the Portrait of Marie de' Medici, c. 1622-1625, oil on canvas, 394 x 295 cm (Musée du Louvre)
Speakers: Dr. Steven Zucker and Dr. Beth Harris
. Created by Beth Harris and Steven Zucker.Want to join the conversation?
- At, just before the video ends Dr. Harris you state "Although, it is important to remember she [Marie de'Medici] is just acting as a member of her class..." 4:53
I wonder though, what other Queens-to-be have commissioned such grandiosity such as this?(7 votes)- she seemed like such a humble person. (sarcasm)(5 votes)
- Please do videos on the other 23 paintings (or at least most of them)! I want to know more about them(3 votes)
- There's an article including at least 22 of them here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie_de'_Medici_cycle
a wonderful page with 21 of them here: http://travelphotobase.com/u/F/FPMVEM.HTM
and another thing with great pictures here: http://www.somuchmoretosee.com/2013/03/rubens-medici-series-in-louvre.html(5 votes)
- What does Hera and Argus represent?It's the couple sitting above the two angels holding the painting.(3 votes)
- Hera is featured with Zeus as a way to show that the king is being told by powerful divine beings that he should marry Marie de' Medici.(4 votes)
- Am I correct in thinking that the peacock behind Hera is a reference to the Greek myth about Argus, the hundred-eyed giant?(3 votes)
- Your interpretation of the peacock's symbolism is not right or wrong. There are several interpretations of the bird depending on the person. To me, I thought the peacock was a symbol of Hera because the peacock was her bird.(2 votes)
- This painting gives me the impression that it contains a bunch of sarcasm. As though Rubens is tolerating the ego of Medici, knowing her life has been boring, in a kind of 'you want epic, I'll give you totally over the top epic!' way. It appears to contain humour, with Cupid offering the woman in the portrait 'you want this?', and the mischievous cupid below looking out at us. I love this painting, it makes me smile.
Are there any documented, known usages of humour or sarcasm of that period?(2 votes)- From the author:Wit, humor, and sarcasm can be found in quite a bit of art but when the patron is the target and a powerful ruler, it had better be subtle.(2 votes)
- Why is the god of marriage holding a candle?(1 vote)
- He is holding a flaming torch, which symbolizes the ardor of love.(3 votes)
- Would you not bow before her? I think she is worth 850 points.(1 vote)
- in reality, she was quite ugly and fat. also the worlds worst helicopter parent(2 votes)
Video transcript
(piano music) -We're in the musee du Louvre in Paris, and we're in an enormous
room which is completely filled with 24 huge paintings
by Peter Paul Rubens about the life of one woman. -Well, one very important woman, or at least she thought so. These were commissioned
by Marie de Medici, a member of the very wealthy and powerful Italian Medici family
who married Henry IV, the King of France. -And she hired Rubens,
one of the most important painters in Europe during
the Baroque period, to paint an elaborate
cycle of the triumphs of her life, and then
she put the series in her own mansion, in what is now the Luxembourg Gardens, just
south of the Louvre. Now this wasn't an easy
task, because although she was wealthy and she married a king, her life just wasn't that interesting. She had children, one
of them died in infancy. Her husband would ultimately
die, and she would become regent of France until her son was old enough to rule
himself, but besides that, there really wasn't enough
to fill 24 canvasses. -So Rubens was very
inventive, and elevated these moments of her life
by including mythological and allegorical figures
that gave a sense that her position as queen
was divinely ordained. -And we certainly see that
in the panel that shows Henry IV first gazing on
her face in a portrait. It's interesting, because in this case, we're looking at a painting of a man who's looking at a painting. -You can see that he's completely taken with the image of her. It looks as though he's about to say, be still my heart. He turns his body toward the portrait, his left hand is open,
a gesture of being awed. -But there's such elegance in the way he turns his body. It's such an expression
of the courtly manners of France in the 17th century. -Then it's funny, because
we're talking about Catholic Europe, but this
is filled with ancient Greek and Roman mythological figures. We see Zeus and his wife
Juno, also known as Hera. -And we can identify
them because of the eagle on Zeus' side who holds
a thunder bolt, and the peacock behind Hera. So you're right, we're
not seeing Christian references that speak to
the value of this couple, but rather this mythic
caste of characters. So Henry is taken by this
portrait of Marie de Medici, and the portrait is being
held aloft by Cupid, appropriately the god
we associate with love, Eros in Greek, and then
Hymen, the god of marriage. -And behind Henry is a
personification of France, also urging him forward, as though saying, do this for France. -So there's political
imperative here as well. This is not only a match
made of love, not only a match that has been
sanctified by the gods, but this is an important
political alliance as well. -Right, this is an
important moment for France. -And then we have this
marvelous landscape, which is quite low in the
composition, and we can see that there's been a
battle, and in the foreground the king has taken off
his helmet, he's put down his shield, we see
two puti who are playing with these, it is as
if the king is leaving behind war for love. -We have the sense of
wanting to leave everything behind for his great
love, for Marie de Medici. -Marie de Medici, in the
portrait, is quite formal. She's surrounded by this
glorious color, this very rich fabric, but she is
close to the picture plane, and looks rather straight
out, so there is a kind of flatness, whereas the king is in the process of movement. -In typical Baroque
fashion, the composition is structured using a
series of diagonal lines, so my eye starts at the
bottom with those two puti, leading up to Henry the IV the king, and the personification of France, across to the portrait,
which occupies the center of the painting, the god
of marriage, and then back up to Hera and Zeus. So there's a zig-zagging
that animates the entire composition, with that
portrait still in the center. -The complex pathways
that Rubens uses to lead our eye around this canvas is masterful. There are these little veniats. Look at the way the
personification of France touches so gently the
king's upper arm, and seems to be looking eagerly
at the portrait, almost as if she's whispering in his ear. Then look at the Cupid,
who looks back at the king's face to judge
his reaction, and seems so pleased with his admiration. -Or the Cupid below, who's playing with Henry's shield. -And looks directly out at us. -Very mischievously. -Rubens produced the
entire series within just a few years, but he was
also known to have an enormous workshop of assistants. Rubens would have laid
out the overall drawing, and would have likely been responsible for the hands, for the
faces, and presumably, for the representation of the king and Marie de Medici, but he
would have had lots of help with all that surround them. -It is so over-the-top. -The word ego doesn't even suffice. -Although it's important to remember that she is just acting as
a member of her class. (piano music)