Jacob and his twelve sons

Jacob and his twelve sons (Spanish: Los doce hijos de Jacob) is a series of thirteen paintings by Spanish artist Francisco de Zurbarán.

Jacob by Zurbarán

The series of life-size portraits was painted between 1641 and 1658.[1] Twelve of the thirteen paintings are in Auckland Castle, Bishop Auckland, England, and one is in Grimsthorpe Castle, Lincolnshire.

The series traveled to the Americas for the first time in 2016, to be displayed at the Meadows Museum in Dallas, Texas, from 17 September 2017 until 7 January 2018, and then in New York City at the Frick Collection from 31 January until 22 April 2018.[2]

Paintings

The depiction of Jacob and his sons in epic portraits in unusual for the era. More commonly, artists, including Ribera and Velázquez, included these men in narrative painting of Biblical episodes.[3] According to art historian Jeannine Baticle, a series of Jacob and his sons survives in the possession of the Orden Tercera de San Francisco in Lima, Peru, which she describes as a "fairly close replica" of the Auckland Zurbarán series. An additional series, "a more distant and awkward imitation" by an imitator, is in the possession of the Academia de Bellas Artes in Puebla, Mexico.[3]

History

It is not known how the paintings reached England, although some speculate that they may have been captured by English pirates while traveling from the painter's studio in Seville to a buyer in a Spanish colony in the Americas.[3]

The series is first recorded in 1722 as part of the estate of one William Chapman.[3] It was later owned by London Banker James Mendez, whose heirs sold twelve of the thirteen to Richard Trevor, Bishop of Durham in 1757.[4] Bishop Trevor, a political liberal and a backer of the Jewish Naturalization Act 1753, acquired the paintings, and redesigned and reconstructed the Long Dining Room at Auckland Palace, as a public statement of his support for Jewish naturalization rights.[5] Although the Bill was quickly repealed, the paintings still hang in the Long Dining at Auckland.[5]

The portrait of one of Jacob's sons, Benjamin, was sold separately to the Peregrine Bertie, 3rd Duke of Ancaster and Kesteven;[3] it hangs in Grimsthorpe Castle, Lincolnshire.[6] Bishop Trevor commissioned Arthur Pond to produce a copy painting of "Benjamin". It hangs, with Jacob and the other eleven sons, in the Castle's Long Dining Room, which Bishop Trevor rebuilt for the purpose of displaying the pictures.[7][8]

21st century

In 2001 the Church Commissioners voted to sell the paintings, a decision that was revoked in 2011 following a donation of £15 million by investment manager and philanthropist Jonathan Ruffer; new arrangements placed the paintings, along with the castle, under the Auckland Castle Trust, making them available to the public after centuries during which they hung in a private home where they could be seen only by invited guests or by special arrangement with the Bishop's staff.[9][10][11] [12]

gollark: The laser thing has been a feature since they added... a bunch of other tools for interacting with planets, I think, probably a month or more?
gollark: styropyro in the year 2100
gollark: The memespeech thing sounds neat. But Unicode's ridiculous amount of invisible characters offers a different solution: storing your data in those instead!
gollark: The main danger with water, as I see it, is that a water outage might take longer to resolve because of the general strain imposed by coronavirus. But that doesn't really necessitate stockpiling.
gollark: Not water.

References

  1. Gállego, Julián; Gudiol, José (1987). Zurbarán. London: Alpine Fine Arts Collection, Ltd. pp. 353–354. ISBN 0-88168-115-6.
  2. Brown, Mark (31 July 2016). "Zurbarán masterpieces to leave UK for US for the first time". The Guardian. Retrieved 31 July 2016.
  3. Baticle, Jeannine (1987). Zurbarán. Metropolitan Museum of Art. p. 208. ISBN 0870995022.
  4. "After 370 Years, Jacob and His Twelve Sons Arrive at Israel Museum". Haaretz. 30 May 2018. Retrieved 28 October 2019.
  5. Appelbaum, Diana Muir (14 November 2012). "Jacob's Sons in the Bishop's Palace". Jewish Ideas Daily. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
  6. Morris, Roderick (23 October 2013). "Master of Light Leaps From the Shadows". New York Times. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
  7. Jenkins, Simon (2005-10-07). "London should keep its hands off the treasures of the north". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 24 August 2007. Retrieved 2007-08-21.
  8. "Bid to keep castle paintings in N-E". The Northern Echo. 2001-05-14. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007. Retrieved 2007-08-21.
  9. "Church Commissioners vote to keep the Zurbaráns" (Press release). Church of England. 2005-09-29. Retrieved 2009-08-30.
  10. Jonathan Garnier Ruffer bio at Debrett's People of Today Archived 2015-04-26 at the Wayback Machine
  11. www.ft.com
  12. "Francisco Zurbarán paintings saved by £15m donation" (Press release). BBC. 2011-03-31. Retrieved 2011-03-31.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.