
Getty Museum
Seated Woman
Creator
Roelandt SaveryFlemish Artist · 1576–1639
All works by this person →As a child, Roelandt Savery moved to Haarlem from the southern Netherlands. By 1591 he was probably studying with his brother Jacob and the artist Hans Bol in Amsterdam. For much of his career Savery traveled widely, working for Rudolf II in Prague and then Emperor Matthias, before settling in Utrecht in 1619. The nearly ten years Savery worked for Rudolf II, beginning about 1603, were decisive. H
More on Getty ULAN- Date
- about 1603–1608/1609
- Medium
- Pen and brown ink over metalpoint
- Culture
- Flemish
- Department
- Drawings
- Institution
- Getty Museum
Lost in thought, an old woman sits quietly, resting her feet on a bucket. A large cloak trimmed with fur surrounds her body, so that only her head, hunched shoulders, and large feet in their wooden shoes remain uncovered. A broad hat shelters her face, seen only in sharp profile. Roelandt Savery concentrated on broadly outlining the figure's position and the folds of fabric that obscure her body. He ignored more minute details such as the design of her hat or the form of her stool, suggesting only the general form of each. This drawing comes from a series of studies similar in subject and style. On many of the sheets, although not this one, the artist inscribed the words *naer het leven*, which may suggest that each scene was drawn from life rather than from the artist's imagination. At a time when most drawings were prepared in the studio, this fact was unusual enough to be worth noting. The notations surrounding the figure suggest possible colors, perhaps for use in a painting.
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