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Encyclopedia > Las Meninas
Las Meninas
Diego Velázquez, 1656
Oil on canvas
318 × 276 cm, 125.2 × 108.7 in
Museo del Prado, Madrid

Las Meninas (also known as The Maids of Honour) is a painting by the Spanish artist Diego Velázquez. Completed in 1656, and housed in the Museo del Prado in Madrid, Spain, the work is one of the world's most famous paintings. Download high resolution version (865x985, 127 KB) Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ... For others named Velázquez, see Velazquez (disambiguation). ... // Events Mehmed Köprülü becomes Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire. ... Mona Lisa, Oil on wood panel painting by Leonardo da Vinci. ... Bold text The Museo del Prado is a famous museum and art gallery located in Madrid; the capital of Spain. ... Motto: (Spanish for From Madrid to Heaven) Location Coordinates: , Country Spain Autonomous Community Comunidad Autónoma de Madrid Province Madrid Administrative Divisions 21 Neighborhoods 127 Founded 9th century Government  - Mayor Alberto Ruiz-Gallardón Jimémez (PP) Area  - Land 607 km² (234. ... For others named Velázquez, see Velazquez (disambiguation). ... Bold text The Museo del Prado is a famous museum and art gallery located in Madrid; the capital of Spain. ... Motto: (Spanish for From Madrid to Heaven) Location Coordinates: , Country Spain Autonomous Community Comunidad Autónoma de Madrid Province Madrid Administrative Divisions 21 Neighborhoods 127 Founded 9th century Government  - Mayor Alberto Ruiz-Gallardón Jimémez (PP) Area  - Land 607 km² (234. ...


Luca Giordano said of Las Meninas that it was, itself, the "theology of painting", while Sir Thomas Lawrence wrote that the work incarnates the philosophy of art.[1] The creation of man, fresco in the Palazzo Medici-Riccardi in Florence, 1684-1686. ... Alexander MacKenzie painted by Thomas Lawrence (c. ...

Contents

Description

The picture was inventoried at Palacio Real de Madrid under the title "The family picture". In 1843, Pedro de Madrazo catalogued it for El Museo Del Prado as Las Meninas, following the description of Acisclo Antonio Palomino de Velasco (1655-1726), in his Museo pictórico.[1] Menina ("girl" in Portuguese) came to mean "maid of honour" in the Spanish court. Palacio Real de Madrid The Palacio Real de Madrid (Royal Palace of Madrid) is the official residence of the King of Spain, located in the Spanish capital of Madrid. ...


This painting depicts the Infanta Margarita, the daughter of King Philip IV of Spain and the eldest daughter of his second wife, Mariana of Austria, surrounded by two ladies-in-waiting, a dwarf, a fool, a mastiff, and Velázquez himself standing at an easel. Margaret of Spain in Mourning Dress 1666 by Juan Bautista Martinez del Mazo. ... Philip IV (), (April 8, 1605 – September 17, 1665) was King of Spain from 1621 to 1665 and also King of Portugal until 1640. ... Mariana of Austria, 1652, portrayed by Diego Velázquez Mariana or Maria-Anna of Austria (Vienna, 23 December 1634 - Madrid, 16 May 1696), daughter of Habsburg Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand III and Infanta Maria Ana of Spain, was the second wife of her maternal uncle Philip IV of Spain. ...


This is a composition of enormous representational impact. The Infanta Margarita stands proudly. Although she is the smallest, she is clearly the central figure; one of the maids is kneeling before her, and the other leaning towards her, so that the standing Infanta, with her broad hooped skirt, becomes the fulcrum of the movement. The dwarf, Maribarbola, is about the same size as the Infanta; by comparison Margarita seems very delicate.

On the left in the painting, dark and calm, the painter can be seen standing at a vast canvas - it is one of the best self-portraits of Velázquez.

Above the head of the Infanta, the ruling couple is reflected in the mirror, possibly sitting for the painting Velázquez is creating in Las Meninas. A courtier and chamberlain to the queen, José Nieto de Velázquez, stands in the doorway at the back of the room.[2] Download high resolution version (563x748, 25 KB) Self-portrait of Diego Velázquez as a detail in Las Meninas. ... Download high resolution version (563x748, 25 KB) Self-portrait of Diego Velázquez as a detail in Las Meninas. ... Self Portrait is a 1970 double album by Bob Dylan. ...


The point of view of the picture is at least approximately that of the royal couple. The spatial structure and positioning of the figures is such that the group of maids around the Infanta appears to be standing on "our" side, opposite Philip and his wife. Not only is the "performance" for their benefit, but the attention of the painter is also concentrated on them, for he appears to be working on their portrait. Although they can only be seen in the mirror reflection, the distant images of the king and queen occupy a central position, both in terms of composition and content.


As spectators, our position in relation to the painting is uncertain. Are we excluded from the scene, with the ruling couple in our place? In this interpretation, the painting is completely hermetic, a hermeticism further intensified by the fact that the painting in front of Velázquez is completely hidden from our view. Or are we standing beside the royal couple, to the real king's (not the reflected one's) right? This would explain the spectator's not appearing in the mirror at the back, but also raises the possibility that the spectator is intimate, at least spatially, with royalty. In 17th century Spain, this would have been a provocative suggestion. The fact that three of the figures - Velázquez, the Infanta and the dwarf - appear to be looking directly at the spectator rather than to our left where, presumably, the royal couple is standing, lends weight to this interpretation.


According to Palomino, the King, Queen, and the Infantas María Teresa and Margarita often visited Velázquez to watch him at work.[3]


Composition and meaning

In recent years attempts have been made to view the composition in allegorical terms, based upon the portraits and mythological pictures occupying the background wall. Yet it seems most valid to accept at face value, in Michael Foucault's words, "the working painter in all his objective realism".[4] Michel Foucault (October 15, 1926 – June 26, 1984) was a French philosopher and held a chair at the Collège de France choosing for himself the title Professor of the History of Systems of Thought. His writings have had an enormous impact across the humanities and social sciences including...


The painting has three focal points: the luminous Infanta Margarita, the self-portrait by Velázquez, and the half-length reflected images of King Philip IV and Queen Mariana. Amidst them may be discerned contrasts between the child's charm and her regal bearing, the disparity between the artifice of painting and the nature of reality, and the distance between the ethereal images of a king and queen and their dispirited court.[5]


X-rays have shown that Velázquez made minor alterations in the figures as he worked; at first his head inclined to his right, rather than his left.[6] The painting on which the artist is working is not shown, and has thus invited speculation that he represented himself painting, variously, the Infanta Margarita, Las Meninas itself, or a portrait of the King and Queen. None of these theories is conclusive.[7]


Perspective has been suggested through contrasts of light and shadow and overlapping shapes, and despite certain spatial ambiguities, this is the painter's most thoroughly rendered architectural space, and the only one in which a ceiling is included. In no other composition did Velázquez so dramatically lead the eye to areas beyond the viewer's sight: the canvas he is seen painting, and the space beyond the frame where the King and Queen stand can only be imagined.[8] Within the composition, the bareness of the dark ceiling, the back of Velázquez's canvas, and the strict geometry of framed paintings contrast with the animated, brilliantly lit and sumptuously painted foreground entourage.[9]


Interpretation

Las Meninas was the picture which Luca Giordano called the "theology of painting," another way of expressing the opinion of Sir Thomas Lawrence, that this work is the philosophy of art, so true is it in rendering the desired effect. The story is told that the king painted the red cross of Santiago on the breast of the painter, as it appears today on the canvas. The creation of man, fresco in the Palazzo Medici-Riccardi in Florence, 1684-1686. ... Alexander MacKenzie painted by Thomas Lawrence (c. ...


The painting may have been influenced by another very famous painting, the Arnolfini Portrait of 1434 by Jan van Eyck, (now National Gallery, London). At the time it was in the Spanish royal collection, and Velázquez would have been familiar with it.[10] This also has a mirror at the back, reflecting figures who would have the same angle of vision as does the viewer of the painting. The Arnolfini Portrait, The Arnolfini Wedding, The Arnolfini Marriage or the Portrait of Giovanni Arnolfini and his Wife (or various other titles) is a 1434 painting in oil on oak panel by the Early Netherlandish painter Jan van Eyck. ... This article needs additional references or sources for verification. ... Londons National Gallery, founded in 1824, houses a rich collection of over 2,300 paintings dating from the mid-13th century to 1900 in its home on Trafalgar Square. ...

Picasso's 1957 recreation of Las Meninas
Picasso's 1957 recreation of Las Meninas

The famous 20th century artist and co-inventor of cubism, Pablo Picasso, painted a series of 58 interpretations of Las Meninas between August and December 1957. The paintings fill the Las Meninas gallery of the Picasso Museo in Barcelona, Spain. [11] Download high resolution version (1067x789, 189 KB) This work is copyrighted. ... Download high resolution version (1067x789, 189 KB) This work is copyrighted. ... A young Pablo Picasso Pablo Picasso, formally Pablo Ruiz Picasso, (October 25, 1881 - April 8, 1973) was one of the recognized masters of 20th century art. ... Woman with a guitar by Georges Braque, 1913 Cubist villa in Prague, Czech Republic Cubist house in Prague, Czech Republic Cubist House of the Black Madonna, Prague, Czech Republic Cubism was a 20th century art movement that revolutionized European painting and sculpture, and inspired related movements in music and literature. ... “Picasso” redirects here. ... View into the museum. ... Location Coordinates : Time Zone : CET (GMT +1) - summer: CEST (GMT +2) General information Native name Barcelona (Catalan) Spanish name Barcelona Nickname Ciutat Comtal (City of Counts) Postal code 08001–08080 Area code 34 (Spain) + 93 (Barcelona) Website http://www. ...


The philosopher Michel Foucault made an interpretation of this painting in the introduction of his book The Order of Things, primarily focusing on it as exhibiting the first signs of a new episteme in European art, as it attempted to allow the audience of the painting to become the sovereign figure — the true focus of the art of representation is hardly represented: "the necessary disappearance of… the person it resembles and the person in whose eyes it is only a resemblance." The Order of Things (Les Mots et les choses) is a book written by Michel Foucault and was published in 1966. ... As distinguished from techne, the Greek word episteme (literally: science) is often translated as knowledge. ...


Photographer Joel-Peter Witkin also recreated the painting, titled "Las Meninas (Self Portrait)". Joel-Peter Witkin Joel-Peter Witkin (born September 13, 1939, in Brooklyn, New York City) is an American photographer. ...


Notes

  1. ^ a b Encyclopædia Britannica, Eleventh Edition (1911) article on Velázquez
  2. ^ [1] Las Meninas at the Prado, accessed 3/20/07.
  3. ^ López-Rey, page 208.
  4. ^ López-Rey, page 214.
  5. ^ López-Rey, pages 216-17.
  6. ^ López-Rey, page 214.
  7. ^ López-Rey, page 214-16.
  8. ^ López-Rey, page 217.
  9. ^ López-Rey, pages 216-17
  10. ^ López-Rey, page 214.
  11. ^ [2] Museo Picasso, Accessed 4/19/2007

Reference

  • López-Rey, José, Velázquez: Catalogue Raisonné, Taschen, 1999.

External links


  Results from FactBites:
 
Mark Harden's Artchive: Velazquez: Las Meninas (2286 words)
Her ladies-in-waiting, known by the Portuguese name of meninas, are doing their best to cajole her, and have brought her dwarfs, Maribarbola and Nicolasito, to amuse her.
The meninas and the dwarfs form a triangle of which the base is one-seventh of the way up, and the apex is four-sevenths; and within the large triangle are three subsidiary ones, of which the little Infanta is the centre.
While the other protagonists in the Meninas, out of sheer good manners, take their parts in a sort of tableau vivant, she affronts the spectator like a blow from a muffled fist; and I remember the strange and poignant relationship which Velasquez had with all the dwarfs and buffoons whom he painted.
Las Meninas (470 words)
Las Meninas is probably the most famous of the works by great Spanish painter Diego Velazquez.
Margarita Maria, the eldest daughter of the new queen, that is the subject of the well-known picture Las Meninas (the Maids of Honour), #1662 in the Madrid gallery, painted in 1656, where the little lady holds court, surrounded by her ladies-in-waiting, her dwarfs and her mastiff, while Velazquez is seen standing at his easel.
"Las Meninas" was the picture of which Luca Giordano said that it was the "theology of painting," another way of expressing the opinion of Sir Thomas Lawrence, that this work is the philosophy of art, so true is it in rendering the desired effect.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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