Rubens, Peter Paul (15771640)

Rubens, Peter Paul, the greatest of the Flemish painters, born at Siegen, in Westphalia; came with his widowed mother in 1587 to Antwerp, where he sedulously cultivated the painter's art, and early revealed his masterly gift of colouring; went to Italy, and for a number of years was in the service of the Duke of Mantua, who encouraged him in his art, and employed him on a diplomatic mission to Philip III. of Spain; executed at Madrid some of his finest portraits; returned to Antwerp in 1609; completed in 1614 his masterpiece, “The Descent from the Cross,” in Antwerp Cathedral; with the aid of assistants he painted the series of 21 pictures, now in the Louvre, illustrating the principal events in the life of Maria de' Medici during 1628-1629; diplomatic missions engaged him at the Spanish and English Courts, where his superabundant energy enabled him to execute many paintings for Charles I.—e. g. “War and Peace,” in the National Gallery—and Philip IV.; was knighted by both; in all that pertains to chiaroscuro, colouring, and general technical skill Rubens is unsurpassed, and in expressing particularly the “tumult and energy of human action,” but he falls below the great Italian artists in the presentation of the deeper and sublimer human emotions; was a scholarly, refined man, an excellent linguist, and a successful diplomatist; was twice married; died at Antwerp, and was buried in the Church of St. Jacques; his tercentenary was celebrated in 1877 (15771640).

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Ruabon * Rubicon
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Rowley Regis
Rowton Heath
Roxburghshire
Royal Academy of Arts
Royal Society of Edinburgh, The
Royal Society of London
Royan
Royer-Collard, Pierre Paul
Royton
Ruabon
Rubens, Peter Paul
Rubicon
Rubinstein, Anton
Rubrics
Ruby
Rückert, Friedrich
Ruddiman, Thomas
Rudolf I.
Rudolf II.
Rudolf Lake
Rudra