Rubens Paintings
1577 - 1640 Painter, Diplomat, Netherlands, Baroque
Venus and Adonis, 1635
Oil on canvas, 242x197 cm
The Metropolitan Museum, New York Mythological Art
Rubens depicts the scene when Adonis, spear in hand and with hunting dogs straining at the leash, is impatient to be off, while Venus imploringly tries to hold him back. But she pleads in vain. The painting is a variation on a picture painted by the master Rubens most revered: Titian. In Rubens' painting, Venus became the goddess by whom he himself now steered, Helena Fourment, while the fate of Adonis is implicit in the painting's elegiac tone. The nude Venus, grace- fully seated, begs Adonis to remain, gently coaxing the garment from his shoulder. She casts a beseeching glance at him, her anxiety translated in the disorder of her blonde tresses. The tanned and muscular Adonis is clothed in a dazzling red tunic prefiguring the flower that he is to become; he is the incarnation of a Greek statue, his body standing out against the luminous sky that Venus has abandoned for love of him. At his feet, a little Cupid pleadingly clasps one of his thighs; the presence of the god of love and his quiver evokes the first cause of this tragic encounter. But for the duration of the moment, it is love rather than tragedy that prevails. Thus Rubens transforms the Metamorphoses themselves into a symbol of marital love.
Rubens was a devout Roman Catholic, yet his paintings while religious in theme were not influenced by the dogma of his era. Rubens interjected a lusty exuberance into his work rather than staying strictly to his academic, traditional forms. ''Venus and Adonis'' was completed near the end of his life at a time when he struggled with arthritis almost daily.