Three Studies of Women (recto); Four Studies of Hands and a Counterproof of a Kneeling Young Man (verso)

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Three Studies of Women (recto); Four Studies of Hands and a Counterproof of a Kneeling Young Man (verso)

Creator

Abraham Bloemaert

Dutch Artist · 1564–1651

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Despite being the son of an architect and sculptor, Abraham Bloemaert's artistic training was fragmented. He worked under six masters, for one of whom he was also a houseboy. He absorbed the Mannerism of the School of Fontainebleau, which stayed with him for life. Except for a short period in Amsterdam, he lived in Utrecht, becoming so important that Peter Paul Rubens visited him in 1627. Around 1

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Date
1620s
Medium
Red chalk heightened with white gouache
Culture
Dutch
Department
Drawings
Institution
Getty Museum

The soft, smooth skin of this female model seems to glow from within. From the soft, firm contours to the graceful wisps of hair that frame her head and neck so naturally, Abraham Bloemaert delicately modulated his red chalk line on creamy paper. Subtly and sensitively, he then touched in the white bodycolor that makes her luminous skin seem alive. Bloemaert probably made these studies for general practice; no paintings or prints directly relate to this sheet, though the lower profile image recalls an engraving after one of his designs. Bloemaert probably made the counterproof of the kneeling man on the verso by dampening an original drawing, then laying a clean damp sheet on top and running it through a press. Seeing the figure in reverse may have brought a fresh viewpoint to his work. The kneeling man bears a general resemblance to the shepherds in Bloemaert's *Adoration* pictures. The hands sketched next to the man make gestures fitting for such a subject, but no known paintings directly resemble these studies.

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