The Assumption of the Virgin

Getty Museum

The Assumption of the Virgin

Creator

Peter Paul Rubens

Flemish Artist · 1577–1640

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DesignerPainter

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 Ita

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Date
about 1613–1614
Medium
Pen and brown ink, brown wash over black chalk, incised for transfer
Culture
Flemish
Department
Drawings
Institution
Getty Museum

In 1612 Jan and Balthasar Moretus, the owners of Antwerp's Plantin Press, commissioned their friend Peter Paul Rubens to design thirteen illustrations for a new *Breviarium Romanum,* the Catholic prayer book; this drawing and the twelve others were completed by March 1614. A friend since childhood, Balthasar Moretus would in his later years write of Rubens, "I loved this young man who had the most perfect and the most amiable character." The assumption of the Virgin was a subject to which Rubens repeatedly returned throughout his career. In this version, the controlled, classical composition echoes one of Titian's altarpieces of the same subject. The bravura style of Baroque Italian painters also influenced Rubens's ebullient and dramatically foreshortened putti. Rubens began drawing in chalk, which he then covered over with pen, ink, and wash. The chalk underdrawing contains several *pentimenti,* which are most obvious in the figure of the Virgin. These changes of mind, as well as the indents for transfer onto the plate are probably evidence that this drawing was the final of several studies, not the final sheet from which the engraver would work.

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