Author: Jan Van Eyck
Creation: 1434
Style: Early
Netherlandish
Technique: Oil on oak
panel
Dimensions: 82 x 60 cm
National Gallery |
The author and the Flemish school
Van Eyck is considered
as the best representative of the early Netherlandish´s school and, during a
lot of time, it was thought that he had been who invented the technique of oil
painting. Today it´s believed that he improved it in the way that his
brush-stroke with a slower drying allowed him to represent with higher accuracy
the figures in his paintings. In this way, this small work is a summary of all
the school features: attention to detail, interest in colour, naturalism and
perspective study.
Painting description and sociological contextualization
The context in which is
developed the painting of the artists called “early Netherlandish”, of which Van
Eyck is his maximum exponent, is within a consolidated bourgeoisie, thriving in
business, attracted by the interest of interior decoration with wall hangings
and, as in this case, paintings where portraits take up an important role.
Giovanni Arnolfini was a rich Italian dealer, coming from Lucca, who was settled in the city
of Bruges (Flanders) attracted by the commercial possibilities of that area, in
which he reached an extraordinary fortune, of which the painting we are talking
about is a good reflection. The represented objects are, in themselves,
exponent of the extensive geographic relations of his owner.
The Arnolfini Portrait |
In The Arnolfini Marriage what
is represented is the celebration and ratification of the agreements to a
future marriage (with an official sponsalia) or an agreement ceremony in the present of two witnesses. The engagement
agreements, besides being solemn promises of a future marriage, had the
intention of legalizing the new alliance between two families, which was the
true intention of the wedding with frequency and where the bride used to be a
simple pawn in a wider political or economic context.
Both characters, painted at
the forefront, are situated in a room with wood floor and illuminated by a
window that is opened to its left. At couple´s feet appears a dog and, stayed in
the background, it can be observed the carpet corner and the bed canopy. In the
centre of the composition appears a lamp that hangs from the ceiling and, in
the back wall, a mirror in which is reflected all the contents of the room. To
its left some rosaries are hung and, on the frame, we find a Latin inscription,
in Gothic characters, with the following text: “Johanes de Eyck fuit hic, 1434”
(Jan Van Eyck was here, 1434).
Giovanni´s Wife |
Giovanni Arnolfini appeared in
a serious attitude, richly dressed in dark colour with a cape and a wide hat.
His right hand, that is raised, seems to swear or bless, while the left one
hold his wife´s hand, Giovanna, richly dressed in intense green colour with a
white veil. Her bulky belly, on which her other hand is resting, seems to
reveal with clarity that she is pregnant. A soft light surrounds the stage,
hitting it right over the female face, while it´s mitigated over the dealer´s
face.
Thematic-symbolic analysis (the iconographic value of the daily life objects)
Symbolically the Arnolfini´s
painting has originated a great
controversy because of its significant quantity of symbolic elements and the
difficulty of interpretation of some of them, up to the point of debating if
the painting gets really the scene of a marriage celebration, being like a kind
of previous compromise to itself, or an exorcism ceremony of a couple who try
to put off evil of not having had descendants from themselves.
The two pair of clogs (hers, close to the bed; his clogs, at the forefront, to the left) connect
both spouses with home and,
Small Terrier |
The interpretation of the
small terrier as fidelity symbol is
applied to almost whichever dog, associating with the female figure, as much in
later works as previous ones, is found in many female graves. However,
frequently, dogs are particularly common in the Flemish manuscripts
enlightenment where they usually take up an empty area at the forefront of the
pictorial field, exactly like in the double portrait, suggesting that the
primary function of that animal is the composition.
The lamp, in which we
only find a burning candle (whose light would pass unnoticed broad daylight),
is a clear reference to Christ, (divine presence) and, at the same time, it
comes to represent the love flame that can be consumed. Nevertheless, the same
as the clogs case, the candle as a daily object couldn´t have iconographic
value. The candles price was very high in the XV century. Because of this, if
the candles use affected the domestic economy, the only burning candle could
answer to a domestic expense control without further ado.
The rosaries, placed to the left of the mirror, refer to the necessity of persevering
in prayer while the predominant colours are clearly
symbolic as well: while the green one refers to fertility, the red one does it
to passion.
The mirror with circular shape and in whose framework is shown to us ten of fourteen
Stations of the Cross shows the room scene from an inverse perspective, where
it could be appreciated the back of the couple, just like the presence of two
others, who could attend like witnesses to the ceremony for which, in that
epoch, isn´t necessary a priest. Therefore, the mirror would include the
essential element to identify correctly the represented scene: the arrangement
ceremony for a future marriage in presence of the witnesses, one of whom could
be the painter himself.
As much the tassel that hangs from the bed as Giovana´s bulky belly are
clear allusions to fertility. Exactly, on the tassel, in the bed headboard,
appears a female figure who could be Saint Daisy (births patron saint) or Saint
Martha (home patron saint).
On the couple´s hands appears
a gargoyle in smiling attitude. Some
authors consider that this element is basic to understand the painting meaning:
an exorcism by which is expected to move the evil away that grips the couple:
descendants lack.
To sum up, apart from a possible
complex symbolic lecture, the daily elements represented in the pictorial work
can be
seen as a studied representation
of middle-high class richness: the bed and other goods furniture at the
bottom, the lamp and the expensive mirror, the beads of a rock crystal rosary,
the oranges that were extremely expensive in the north of Europe during the XV
century, the small carpet close to the bed, the woman´s sumptuous clothes and
the man´s fashion clothes and, finally, the woman´s small terrier. Without a
doubt, it´s a company animal, without another function of giving pleasure to
its owner, that may have seen as another way of emulating the high society,
where the tendency to possess dogs as pets was a common practice in the XIV
century.
Oranges Detail |
Technical-compositional analysis
The painter´s signature encourages us to look closer into the mirror that, due to its distorted
reflection, takes the spectator to look for more in the reflected image and, at
the same time, increase our vision out of and beyond the front shot of the
painting.
Mirror Detail |
The mirror positioning at the bottom of the scene supposes a true innovation in the painting
world, thinking that this work had influence in other paintings that use the
same resource decisively, as happens in Velazquez´s Ladies in Waiting.
The light is made into a
spaces configurator element and contributes to power, through its reflections,
the particularities of physical and sensorial character of each object. At the
same time the perspective
contributes to develop and goes in depth relating to this figurative conquest.
What it gives plasticity to
objects is Van Eyck´s skill as naturalist painter combined with a wide
range of possibilities that provides him the use of oil technique while
he manipulates the colour scale, light and shadow to improve the
three-dimensional quality of his images.
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