Provenance: private collection
The River Scheldt, the vital artery of the city of Antwerp, divides this balanced composition into two equal parts. On the right bank of the river (the upper...
read moreProvenance: private collection
The River Scheldt, the vital artery of the city of Antwerp, divides this balanced composition into two equal parts. On the right bank of the river (the upper half), a panoramic view of the city emerges from the misty depths, dominated by the towers of the Church of St. Walburga, the spire of the gothic cathedral, the church of St. Andrew and the abbey of St. Michael. On the left bank, in the foreground, there is a small village built up around the chapel of St. Anne. A crowd of people has gathered on the riverbanks in order to admire the ships heading out to sea. Several boats under full sail and a richly ornamented galley raise their proud silhouettes against the wind, symbols of the city’s mercantile success.
There is another version of this view of Antwerp in the collection of the Belgian Royal Museums of the Fine Arts in Brussels, in which Jan Wildens depicts a decisive event in the city’s history: the arrival on the 4th of September 1632 of Maria de Medici, queen and regent of France, having fled her country accompanied by the infant Isabella. During their brief stay in Antwerp, the two sovereigns visited the workshop of Rubens and Van Dyck, as well as the printing works of Plantin, all of which were symbols of the city’s influence. Their visit was the occasion of incomparable festivities, the memory of which still resonates in this composition. In fact, the city had already begun its decline, consecrated by the Treaty of Münster (1648) which closed the Schelde to maritime traffic.
The exceptional format of this canvas and the quality of its robust and spirited brushwork are like a blazing denial of this slow decline foretold. It offers a perfect platform for the artist’s exquisite atmospheric sensibility, particularly evident in the great swath of stormy sky pierced here thereby raises on. The entire composition is thus shot through with shimmering light, from the façade of the square around the chapel of St. Anne, to the River, above which heavy storm clouds are gathering.
Favoring subtle tints and discreet harmonies, Jan Wildens thus imbues this panorama of Antwerp with a silent but powerful sense of melancholy, as if he wished to pay homage to the past glories of his native city.
1586 – Antwerp – 1653
Born in Antwerp, Jan Wildens completed his apprenticeship with Peter van Hulst and was made a master in the Antwerp guild in 1604. After some travels, which took him to...
read more1586 – Antwerp – 1653
Born in Antwerp, Jan Wildens completed his apprenticeship with Peter van Hulst and was made a master in the Antwerp guild in 1604. After some travels, which took him to Italy in particular, he settled permanently in the city of his birth in 1618. The marriage between Rubens and Helene Fourment in 1630 made Wildens a member of the great Antwerp master’s family. It is for reasoned that his name is closely linked with the sale of the latter’s art collection.
More than any other painter, he was able to assimilate Rubens’ landscape style : he copied the Master’s compositions over and over, as he had by the joined his workshop, sometimes having him paint the landscape background of his works, particularly the prestigious paintings of the gallery of Maria de Medici, currently in the Louvre.
His sense of decorative forms, the breadth of his brushwork and the range of his palette associate Jan Wildens with Rubens. However, he also worked with more discrete harmonies and had a penchant for softer tones. Next the dynamic and tempestuous personality of Rubens, his body of work expresses a peaceful and mild character. His landscapes, in which horizontal lines dominate, and which invite the viewer’s gaze to wander freely, are as soothing to the eye as to the spirit.