Artist: Sir Peter Paul Rubens (Flemish, 1577-1640)
Title: St Martin Dividing his Cloak
Medium: Antique steel engraving on wove paper after the original by Master Engraver William Henry Worthington (ca. 1795-ca. 1839).
Signature: Signed in the plate.
Dimensions: Image Size – 4 7/8 x 5 5/8 inches.
Framed Dimensions: Approximately 14 x 15 inches.
Framing: This piece has been professionally matted and framed using all new materials.
St. Martin as a military saint may be allowed a horse, armour and weapons; nor is there particular elegance of action required perhaps, in dividing his cloak with a public beggar; we consider it however as necessary to nature and truth, that he should look at what his sword is doing, instead of which, he is looking on the group of half clad mendicants, who, with faces practiced in expressing woe and dolour, have beset his path. He could not well choose to do otherwise, for the group is in all respects a remarkable one. The beggar, seated on the ground, enacting the part of a cripple, has a back like Hercules, powerful and sinewy, and seems altogether a sort of person likely to procure alms by force which refused to come through supplication; the other kneeling, with his head bandaged to cover wounds, real or pretended, might do for a portrait of the ancient mendicant, Irus, who contested with Ulysses, on the threshold of his own palace, for the crumbs which fell from the table of the suitors; but the woman seems in sincerity, her woes are not artificial and assumed, her naked children, haggard looks and disheveled hair, cannot fail to direct the Saint’s hand to his pocket as soon as he has disposed of the moiety of his cloak.
International diplomat, savvy businessman, devout Catholic, fluent in six languages, an intellectual who counted Europe’s finest scholars among his friends, Peter Paul Rubens was always first a painter. Few artists have been capable of transforming such a vast variety of influences into a style utterly new and original. After study with local Antwerp painters, Rubens began finding his style in Italy, copying works from antiquity, Renaissance masters such as Michelangelo and Titian, and contemporaries like Annibale Carracci and Caravaggio. He worked principally in Rome and Genoa, where Giulio Romano’s frescoes influenced him greatly. Returning to Antwerp, Rubens became court painter to the Spanish Viceroys, eventually receiving commissions from across Europe and England. Rubens’s energetic Baroque style blends his northern European sense of realism with the grandeur and monumentality he saw in Italian art. His characteristic free, expressive technique also captured joie de vivre. From his workshop, with its many assistants, came quantities of book illustrations, tapestry designs, festival decorations, and paintings on every subject, which his engravers reproduced. He maintained control of the quality, while charging patrons according to the extent of his involvement on a picture. Frans Snyders, Jacob Jordaens, and Anthony van Dyck each assisted him.Rubens’s impact was immediate, international, and long lasting. The works of Thomas Gainsborough and Eugène Delacroix, among others, testify to his posthumous influence.