In some unspecified time in the future within the nineteenth century, the ladies depicted by Pieter Paul Rubens turned typecast and described in English as “Rubenesque”. The time period turned shorthand for a voluptuous feminine physique, alluding to the Flemish Baroque grasp’s penchant for nudes. Rubens’s popularity as a painter of the flesh was strengthened extra not too long ago by Fb, whose censorship of nudity within the artist’s works provoked a grievance from the Flanders vacationer board.
It’s a notion that the curators of the Dulwich Image Gallery’s autumn exhibition, Rubens and Girls, hope to dispel—or not less than complicate. The present is billed as the primary to look at the “diverse and vital place occupied by ladies, each actual and imagined, in [Rubens’s] world”. The theme was impressed by the proliferation of feminine figures within the gallery’s personal Rubens holdings and by the artist’s biography. “The extra we checked out Rubens the person, the extra we realised how important ladies have been within the story of his life,” says the artwork historian Amy Orrock, the exhibition’s co-curator.
Besieged with commissions from the courts of Europe and aspiring artists who flocked to his Italianate palazzo-studio in Antwerp, Rubens as soon as declared himself “the busiest and most harassed man on this planet”. And but, “he nonetheless discovered time to color over 50 portraits of his members of the family,” notes Ben van Beneden, the present’s co-curator and former director of the Rubenshuis. “That tells us one thing concerning the significance he connected to household life and to his family members.”

Rubens’s Clara Serena Rubens, the Artist’s Daughter (round 1620-23) Non-public Assortment
Tender portraits of Rubens’s first spouse, Isabella Brant, and their daughter Clara Serena will seem within the first room of the present. There’s a poignant risk that they have been made as memorials: Isabella died, most likely of the plague, solely three years after the lack of Clara, aged 12. Isabella’s options may also be discerned within the Virgin in Adoration Earlier than the Sleeping Christ Little one (round 1618), demonstrating how Rubens infused his spiritual commissions with commentary from life.
Among the sensuous goddesses and nymphs of the late mythological work resemble his second spouse, Helena Fourment, whose likeness is captured in a nude research from the Musée du Louvre. This will likely be displayed alongside nudes impressed by one other, no much less important, supply: classical sculpture, such because the marble Crouching Venus (2nd century AD) from the British Museum.

Rubens’s The Virgin in Adoration of the Little one (round 1616) KBC Financial institution, Antwerp, Snijders&Rockox Home
But greater than merely nude, Rubens’s “sort” of lady was highly effective, energetic, even brave. “He typically presents his ladies in heroic methods, at a really dramatic excessive level of a biblical or historic narrative,” Orrock says. In Diana Coming back from the Hunt (round 1615), for example, the muscular goddess is “posed like an historical Roman warrior”.
The exhibition’s last part will argue that Rubens’s ladies have been certain up in concepts of struggle and peace. The artist lived underneath the shadow of the Eighty Years’ Conflict and advocated for peace as a diplomatic agent to the ruler of the Spanish Netherlands. In opposition to that backdrop, he portrayed historical Roman goddesses because the idealised “bringers of peace and many” and a “life-giving pressure”, Orrock says. Nowhere is that clearer than within the present’s closing work: The Start of the Milky Means (1636-38), a female creation fantasy through which the spill of Juno’s breast milk provides start to the cosmos.
• Rubens and Girls, Dulwich Image Gallery, London, 27 September-28 January 2024