翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Saint Saviour
・ Saint Saviour (musician)
・ Saint Saviour High School of Brooklyn
・ Saint Saviour's Chapel (Harvard-Westlake School)
・ Saint Saviour's Episcopal Church and Rectory
・ Saint Saviour, Guernsey
・ Saint Saviour, Jersey
・ Saint Saviours GAA
・ Saint Scholastica Convent
・ Saint Sebastian
・ Saint Sebastian (Bernini)
・ Saint Sebastian (Lorenzo Lippi)
・ Saint Sebastian (Titian, Hermitage)
・ Saint Sebastian at the Column (Dürer)
・ Saint Sebastian School
Saint Sebastian Tended by Irene (Ter Brugghen)
・ Saint Sebastian's School
・ Saint Seiya
・ Saint Seiya Cloth Crown
・ Saint Seiya Episode.G
・ Saint Seiya Myth Cloth
・ Saint Seiya Myth Cloth Appendix
・ Saint Seiya Myth Cloth EX
・ Saint Seiya Omega
・ Saint Seiya Omega (season 1)
・ Saint Seiya Omega (season 2)
・ Saint Seiya Original Soundtrack I–VIII
・ Saint Senara
・ Saint Seraphim (Orthodox) Cathedral
・ Saint Serapia


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Saint Sebastian Tended by Irene (Ter Brugghen) : ウィキペディア英語版
Saint Sebastian Tended by Irene (Ter Brugghen)

''Saint Sebastian Tended by Irene'' is an oil-on-canvas painting by Hendrick ter Brugghen dated to 1625. Now in the Allen Memorial Art Museum of Oberlin, Ohio, the piece depicts the Roman Catholic subject of Saint Sebastian being saved by Irene of Rome and her maid following his attempted martyrdom by the Roman authorities. An exemplary piece of the Italianate Baroque tendency in Dutch Golden Age painting, the painting employs dramatic uses of light and skillful chiaroscuro to depict its religious subject, evidence of influence from Caravaggio and Ter Brugghen's fellow Utrecht Caravaggisti.
It was described by Seymour Slive as ter Brugghen's "masterpiece": "the large, full, forms of the group have been knit together into a magnificent design, and what could have been hard and sculptural is remarkably softened by the soft, silvery light which plays over Sebastian's half-dead, olive-grey body as well as the reds, creamy whites, and plum colours worn by the women who tend the saint".〔Slive, 22〕
==Provenance==
The piece is recorded in the collection of Pieter Eris in Amsterdam during the 1660s.〔 Its full provenance remains speculation; perhaps it was intended for a charitable institution where the sick were cared for, such as those with the plague which became prevalent in the Netherlands around the 1600s. Others supposed it was intended for a hidden church or private chapel, and then later reached the art market. It has also been suggested that the painting was commissioned by a ''schutterij'' (militia company) though this idea has generally been dismissed. It seems most likely to be have been commissioned by Catholics, as the subject is virtually specific to Counter-Reformation art, though Ter Brugghen was himself Protestant. The painting eventually found its way to a Frederick Mont, from whom the painting was purchased by Oberlin College in 1953. The piece has been exhibited in the Washington, D.C.’s National Gallery of Art, Utrecht’s Centraal Museum and New York’s The Metropolitan Museum of Art.〔
''Saint Sebastian Tended by Irene'' was a mainly 17th-century subject, though found in predella scenes as early as the 15th century.〔Boeckl, p. 77〕 It was painted by Georges de La Tour, Trophime Bigot (four times), Jusepe de Ribera,〔.〕 and others. It may have been a deliberate attempt by the Church to get away from the usual single nude treatment of the subject, which is already recorded in Vasari as sometimes arousing inappropriate thoughts among female churchgoers.〔Barker, 117〕 The Baroque artists usually treated it as a nocturnal chiaroscuro scene, illuminated by a single candle, torch or lantern, in the style fashionable in the first half of the 17th century, and typically set it in an interior, after Sebastian has been carried away. Ter Brugghen's outside setting and choice of the earlier moment are unusual, though shared by the treatment of the subject by Dirck van Baburen.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Saint Sebastian Tended by Irene (Ter Brugghen)」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.