Julius Caesar, Perpetual Dictator, from Twelve Famous Greek and Roman Men

Art Institute of Chicago

Julius Caesar, Perpetual Dictator, from Twelve Famous Greek and Roman Men

Boëtius Adamsz. Bolswert (Dutch, active in Flanders, 1580-1663)

Date
c. 1633
Medium
Engraving on buff laid paper
Culture
Flanders
Department
Prints and Drawings
Institution
Art Institute of Chicago

Peter Paul Rubens’s series of important Greek and Romans reflected the antiquarian culture in which he participated as a collector, as a scholar, and as an interpreter of Classical forms. Rubens’s drawing for this engraving may in fact copy an antique sculpture bust he personally owned. Julius Caesar was one of a dozen figures he selected for the series, along with other Romans such as Caesar’s assassin, Brutus, and the emperor Nero. Despite his learned appreciation for the past, Rubens misinterpreted another bust of Julius Caesar and published it as a portrait of Caesar’s contemporary the writer, orator, and politician Cicero.

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