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Title: El Greco to Velazquez Price: $129.00 plus $15 for shipping, handling, and insurance. |
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Velázquez (or Velásquez), Diego (1599-1660). Spain's greatest painter
was also one of the supreme artists of all time. A master of technique,
highly individual in style, Diego Velasquez may have had a greater
influence on European art than any other painter.
The young Velasquez once declared, "I would rather be the first painter
of common things than second in higher art." He learned much from
studying nature. After his marriage at the age of 19, Velasquez went to
Madrid. When he was 24 he painted a portrait of Philip IV, who became
his patron.
The artist made two visits to Italy. On his first, in 1629, he copied
masterpieces in Venice and Rome. He returned to Italy 20 years later and
bought many paintings--by Titian
Except for these journeys Velasquez lived in Madrid as court painter.
His paintings include landscapes, mythological and religious subjects,
and scenes from common life, called genre pictures. Most of them,
however, are portraits of court notables that rank with the portraits
painted by Titian and Anthony Van Dyck
Velasquez was called the "noblest and most commanding man among the
artists of his country." He was a master realist, and no painter has
surpassed him in the ability to seize essential features and fix them on
canvas with a few broad, sure strokes. "His men and women seem to
breathe," it has been said; "his horses are full of action and his dogs
of life."

The Surrender of Breda

Old Woman Cooking Eggs, 1618
Because of Velasquez' great skill in merging color, light, space, rhythm of line, and mass in such a way that all have equal value, he was known as "the painter's painter." Ever since he taught Bartolomé Murillo
As court painter to Philip IV, Velazquez spent a large part of his life recording, in his cool, detached way, the objective appearance of this rigidly conventional royal household, with little interpretation but with the keenest eye for selecting what was important for pictoral expression and with a control of paint to secure exactly the desired effect. Through acquaintance, while in Italy, with the work of Caravaggio

Maids of Honor

Needlewoman
In painting these royal portraits, whatever interpretation he made or Through his practice of using pigment as it is used in Maids of Honor, and Innocent X, in short or long, thin or thick, apparently hasty and spontaneous but actually most skillfully calculated strokes, Velasquez was a forerunner of the modern practice or direct painting.

