Art historians have often minimized the variety and complexity of
seventeenth-century Spanish painting by concentrating on individual
artists and their works and by stressing discovery of new information
rather than interpretation. As a consequence, the painter emerges in
isolation from the forces that shaped his work. Jonathan Brown offers
another approach to the subject by relating important Spanish Baroque
paintings and painters to their cultural milieu.
A critical survey of the historiography of seventeenth-century Spanish
painting introduces this two-part collection of essays. Part One
provides the most detailed study to date of the artistic-literary
academy of Francisco Pacheco, and Part Two contains original studies of
four major painters and their works: Las Meninas of Velázquez,
Zurbarán's decoration of the sacristy at Guadalupe, and the work by
Murillo and Valdés Leal for the Brotherhood of Charity, Seville. The
essays are unified by the author's intention to show how the artists
interacted with and responded to the prevailing social, theological, and
historical currents of the time. While this contextual approach is not
uncommon in the study of European art, it is newly applied here to
restore some of the diversity and substance that Spanish Baroque
painting originally possessed.