fckyeaharthistory:

Peter Paul Rubens - Rubens, His Wife Helena Fourment, and One of Their Children, mid-late 1630s. Oil on canvas 
From the Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC:

This magnificent portrait of Rubens, his second wife, Helena Fourment, and one of their five children has usually been dated on stylistic grounds to the late 1630s. The child’s blue sash, heavy shoes, and plain collar resemble adult male attire and suggest that he is either Frans Rubens, born in 1633, or, more likely, Peter Paul, born March 1, 1637.Rubens married Helena Fourment on December 6, 1630, when he was fifty-three and she was sixteen. Helena became the model and the inspiration for many paintings by Rubens dating from the 1630s, particularly those dealing with themes of ideal beauty or love. The present composition was considerably revised during execution to shift the emphasis from Rubens, as the dominant half of a courtly couple, to Helena, as ideal wife and mother. The parrot, long a symbol of the Virgin Mary, suggests ideal motherhood, while the fountain, caryatid, and garden setting imply fertility and recall Rubens’s own garden in Antwerp, where he frequently escorted Helena.The painting hung at Blenheim, the Churchill family seat, between its presentation to the first Duke of Marlborough by the city of Brussels in 1704 and its purchase by Baron Alphonse de Rothschild in 1884.

fckyeaharthistory:

Peter Paul RubensRubens, His Wife Helena Fourment, and One of Their Children, mid-late 1630s. Oil on canvas 

From the Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC:

This magnificent portrait of Rubens, his second wife, Helena Fourment, and one of their five children has usually been dated on stylistic grounds to the late 1630s. The child’s blue sash, heavy shoes, and plain collar resemble adult male attire and suggest that he is either Frans Rubens, born in 1633, or, more likely, Peter Paul, born March 1, 1637.

Rubens married Helena Fourment on December 6, 1630, when he was fifty-three and she was sixteen. Helena became the model and the inspiration for many paintings by Rubens dating from the 1630s, particularly those dealing with themes of ideal beauty or love. The present composition was considerably revised during execution to shift the emphasis from Rubens, as the dominant half of a courtly couple, to Helena, as ideal wife and mother. The parrot, long a symbol of the Virgin Mary, suggests ideal motherhood, while the fountain, caryatid, and garden setting imply fertility and recall Rubens’s own garden in Antwerp, where he frequently escorted Helena.

The painting hung at Blenheim, the Churchill family seat, between its presentation to the first Duke of Marlborough by the city of Brussels in 1704 and its purchase by Baron Alphonse de Rothschild in 1884.

(via vibiasabina)

  1. the-art-of-things reblogged this from thisivyhouse
  2. myroommatesarehoneybadgers reblogged this from thisivyhouse
  3. likeithaute reblogged this from thisivyhouse
  4. thisivyhouse reblogged this from ladynicollette
  5. citrusina reblogged this from ladynicollette
  6. ladynicollette reblogged this from johnyzuper
  7. marchesamedici reblogged this from jaded-mandarin
  8. johnyzuper reblogged this from vibiasabina
  9. vibiasabina reblogged this from jaded-mandarin
  10. peonypompa reblogged this from jaded-mandarin
  11. glyce reblogged this from jaded-mandarin
  12. jaded-mandarin reblogged this from mesmatins
  13. mesmatins reblogged this from dutch-and-flemish-painters
  14. dutch-and-flemish-painters reblogged this from artpedia
  15. cesarinou reblogged this from artpedia
  16. holyshnikees reblogged this from artpedia
  17. uno-sole-minor reblogged this from artpedia
  18. dientes-de-leche reblogged this from artpedia and added:
    Peter Paul Rubens - Rubens, His Wife Helena Fourment, and One of Their Children, mid-late 1630s. Oil on canvas
  19. nadieseconoce reblogged this from dientes-de-leche
  20. rys-piece reblogged this from artpedia and added:
    Child Leashes: Controlling Kids Since The 17th Century
  21. sassydragon reblogged this from artpedia
  22. crazydiamante reblogged this from artpedia
  23. winterhart reblogged this from artpedia
  24. mynamemeansblack reblogged this from artpedia