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Conference "VelΓ‘zquez, troppo vero. The painter and his techniques", given by Jaime GarcΓa-MΓ‘iquez (technician of the Technical Documentation Cabinet of the Prado Museum), on February 23, 2021. It is part of the Francisco Calvo Serraller "VelΓ‘zquez" series of lectures, organized by the FundaciΓ³n de Amigos del Museo del Prado.
Transcript (Rough Translation from Spanish to English)
0:00
[Applause] Good afternoon, thank you very much for the
0:06
invitation first of all to Javier portΓΊs to the foundation of friends of the Prado Museum, I like to say
0:11
affectionately to the friends of the friends of the Prado Museum, word from a friend of
0:17
friends of friends of the Prado Museum And thank you very much for your assistance, so important and so necessary.
0:22
For so many things, not only brave but of epic or medical dimensions, it is
0:29
here Le sulysses and now you a year ago MarΓa Antonia ledΓ³ Γlvarez
0:36
curator an exhibition tribute to the Prado with paintings made by some of the room's guards Antonia was also
0:44
room guard who, although he has already retired, is here this afternoon in some way
0:49
very present here is more present here
0:55
The exhibition was very impressive with works as delicate and intense as
1:00
these, I was in charge of putting a caption to each work and what started out being
1:06
a verse ended up being an independent poem for each artist the tribute exhibition to the Prado
1:12
It was dedicated to the same thing as this cycle to Professor Calvo Serraller, a vignette with his caricature as a comic.
1:20
opened the exhibition and since it was not exactly a work of art in that case, it occurred to me to dedicate a poem to Paco
1:26
bald man to make him like a poetic portrait Beyond the fact that it is a poem by
1:32
circumstance and I like it specifically for two things, first
1:38
place because it pays homage, that is to say plagiarizes, the beginning of
above all Carducho who was the great painter at that time at court and
35:31
VelΓ‘zquez deals with the proposed expulsion of the Moriscos by
35:39
Unfortunately, the painting that VelΓ‘zquez made burned in the castle fire of 1634-35 on New Year's Eve of that one of those
35:47
years of that year but the fact is that well he also won
35:53
VelΓ‘zquez also won the contest not to say there is even in the treaty of
35:58
carducho there are well veiled complaints to a painter that some
36:05
They have wanted to interpret it as referring to VelΓ‘zquez. The fact is that one year
36:12
After winning the contest, Rubens arrives in Madrid and now with Rubens VelΓ‘zquez he cannot and the clearest proof
36:21
is that the portrait the famous equestrian portrait that no one knows where it is
36:28
disappeared that VelΓ‘zquez made in the first years and that was hanging in the quarterdeck is taken down to hang one of the
36:35
same theme the same King also equestrian by rubens a humiliation at court
36:42
certainly tremendous palatial but from a technical point of view
36:47
VelΓ‘zquez has the opportunity to meet the Great European painter of the
36:53
moment must have been a shock, I'm going to say it, let's say like this a little
36:59
but VelΓ‘zquez was a painter in some way yet to be formed, he had a
37:06
extraordinary talent but he had not made the leap he would take at this moment The fact is that he knows rubens and
37:13
one of the decisive issues to know that there was contact between them that of course for Pacheco says
37:20
that rubes had little to do with painters, but the one he had the most to deal with was
37:26
VelΓ‘zquez does not With his son-in-law because they are the primers it is incredible because it is
37:31
as information that we had hidden and that this evidence has been coming to light and they already said it ago
37:40
It's been good in '97, I think a
37:45
on this topic but we have been delving deeper and we actually have the evidence now that it must have been like this rubens
37:53
used very white preparations, practically no one used white preparations in the environment of
38:01
the court except Marino at some point And look at what the x-rays of
38:08
rubens these are the copies that rubens made in Madrid during the time he
38:13
This is the copy of Titian's Adam and Eve, look at how much white lead
38:20
The paint must be barely perceptible because the radiographic density of the primer itself absorbs all the
38:28
radiation good It is true that it is sense here Eve's leg Even the torso a little of Adam no but but notice What
38:35
x-ray itself has power and look at what VelΓ‘zquez does based on Rubens' knowledge and here it is
38:43
Comparative radiographs changed radically from that point on.
38:49
moment What advantage did all this have in using white preparations that did not
38:56
It is nothing new in painting. Flemish paint is made with calcium carbonate. Hispanic Flemish painting is
39:02
made on plaster which in the end is practically the same no but it is something that had been lost no and now
39:08
almost no one used it But this in VelΓ‘zquez particularly creates an effect
39:13
of extraordinary textures because the white background with the paint so diluted
39:18
by VelΓ‘zquez creates a backlit effect where the light, let's say, hits the white background and returns
39:25
towards us through colored transparencies, something that VelΓ‘zquez also used with a special
39:31
ability and effectiveness then to summarize because from
39:38
now VelΓ‘zquez Ya will use this type of preparations throughout his life, Sevillian preparations and I say it
39:44
Also thinking about the chronology of the paintings from the primers we could date the paintings from
39:51
VelΓ‘zquez partly not Sevillian preparations Seville clay red preparations from Madrid
39:57
And this is a little surprising there is a moment when there are over red preparations white reprimings it is as if
40:05
in paintings dated Precisely at that moment it is as if VelΓ‘zquez the paintings
40:11
that I had in the workshop unpainted but primed in red you would take them
40:16
The white reprints are happening, paintings like this one don't happen
40:25
what happens in Italy Well, in Italy everything happens not because it is true that you have to
40:32
also understand that it is a journey that the artist has to nurture.
40:39
little of what there is not in every place but Melate in Italy we see these For a
40:45
part a a preparation here is not so real size scale a preparation
40:51
which is similar to the Sevillanas but which are also the ones being used in Italy. On the other hand, a preparation
40:59
similar to the sevillanas that are being used in Italy but reprinted
41:05
as we have seen the previous paintings And for the first time a painting
41:10
completely primed in white, it will be the first one I make completely
41:15
VelΓ‘zquez who are The Forge of Vulcano and These are
41:20
the test tubes that were made with the quantities of white lead and
41:26
oil that the treaties say, it is not true that with linseed oil these funds have turned a little yellow
41:32
over time, but you see that they are essentially clear, no, because they could be these, they could be these.
41:40
and the drawing from now on is a very essential drawing. Although it is true that
41:47
very precise, not with very few lines, look here at the drawing in its pure state, let's say
41:54
we can know that it is Philip IV
42:00
or in the drawings here they are real size scale I'm going to see them I'm going to
42:06
expand but now we see not a very schematic drawing and at the same time very Exact, very
42:13
precise and how interesting these drawings are, not with certain changes in composition with respect to the image as you have devised
42:21
the figure also works a little, the spinola face also works a little
42:28
or here not this extraordinary young man portrait painting from Munich
42:33
where to fix the drawing along the profile of the face or on the neck
42:41
or this non-masterful detail
42:46
or what happens with the seamstress perhaps from the 50s since the drawing and the sketch are the same thing where the
42:52
carving of the colors is to tell the truth, it is as Pacheco says, not where you start painting and according to this process
42:58
carnations clothes landscapes and again ending for the carnations is
43:04
to say where the carving of the colors and the final painting are also the same thing
43:16
In the most finished works of the 1930s the drawing seems to have disappeared, the color is not a drawing
43:23
Look at how it beads. How it is outlining the figure with the blue colors.
43:29
the drawing has been transfigured into color and color into light
43:36
and this leads me to an important reflection at this conference in a very few years.
43:41
VelΓ‘zquez has gone from brown primers to red to red to white to
43:46
the Sevillian still lifes to the drunks and from the drunks to La Fragua we can say that technically VelΓ‘zquez has
43:53
reached its maturity but this is also the slightly more scandalous term that I want to introduce here today to its
44:00
plenitude will continue to make miraculous pictures but we can no longer say that
44:05
Technically, VelΓ‘zquez needs more resources than he has and those he controls. Now we have a concept of the
44:13
evolution of Progress as a very good optimist, but VelΓ‘zquez at this moment has reached such a height that
44:20
rather than continuing to ascend we can say that it plans for her
44:25
I speak from the technique, this painter from the 1930s would never have thought of painting a painting like Las Meninas.
44:31
What I'm saying is that if he had been told to do it, he would have been able to do something similar to the
44:38
meninas of the drunks to La Fragua have
44:43
It's only been two years and look, they are two different worlds, two years
44:51
from Baltasar Carlos to the daisy, 20 years have passed
44:57
We could make it even more difficult by not comparing the spears. Well, with the
45:02
spinners and we are going to do it on this slide maybe it looks more
45:09
clearly the differences but it is more understood Honestly what I want to say here there is an evolution but there is no
45:17
a Revolution as it had existed before
45:24
a beautiful example of a complete cycle rather than the creative process of innocence
45:30
we did is like Prehistory, the history and history of the creative process of the tenth Innocent is not a
45:36
process also full of unknowns where you have to fill in the gaps Palomino says that to do
45:43
hands [Music] portrayed Juan as a couple
45:49
It is true that David GarcΓa Cueto commented that and
45:56
It is an interesting hypothesis not that he distanced this portrait a little from what was the tenth portrait of innocence.
46:03
Actually this painting was finished in March 1650 and in summer it is portraying
46:08
To the dad it's three four months, well it doesn't seem like too long to me either.
46:13
Furthermore, we do not know the ins and outs that it could have meant or the complexity of
46:18
portray the Pope no and it seems to me that in this process they play a role
46:23
significant these small drawings that are also on a scale of
46:30
real size but I am going to enlarge them not the drawings because of the intensity of His
46:37
wealth also not the points of view the positions the pope in front The Pope in profile the positions of sitting at a
46:45
side or others are drawings that have to do with the precise and effective drawing of
46:50
VelΓ‘zquez is not like a painter looking for solutions and this seems to me to fit very well into the creative process that
46:57
VelΓ‘zquez could have had the possibility of seeing the Pope's alpaca for a very short time or perhaps in one
47:04
kind of meeting, well, or when the Pope receives people, now I don't exactly get the idea.
47:10
word not from Exacto an audience
47:17
Curiously, what is clumsy about them gives it greater authenticity: they are like work tools in their purest form.
47:24
in some way one feels that they could be the seeds of the painting we know
47:30
and then this is the picture then it is important in this case the size of the
47:37
portrait of innocence tenth for something we talked about at the beginning of this talk the painting measures 1.40 by 1.20 and
47:45
remember that the maximum fabric widths that were used in
47:51
Seville and commonly also in Madrid and Toledo was 115, this exceeds a little
47:58
that size VelΓ‘zquez could have found one of the couriers in Rome that
48:03
were larger than this size, well we don't know exactly if because he didn't find them or because he wanted to make one.
48:12
richer fabric The fact is that for this case he used a fabric with a typical pattern
48:17
Italian to say if we had nothing that this man is the pope and that the
48:22
painting is by VelΓ‘zquez and we could reach the conclusion only by seeing this type of fabric that has a drawing
48:27
What is commonly called are tablecloth drawings but specifically they are called terliz And it is typical Italian we could come to
48:34
conclusion that it is an Italian painter who made this painting. The fact is that to avoid a seam or due to the
48:41
richness of the painting in this case VelΓ‘zquez perhaps recalled the
48:47
fabrics with drawings from his early adulthood in Seville and took a screw
48:54
and then to finish the process of the painting that has a success. You remember
49:01
copies are made of tropobero and one of the copies of
49:07
which is documented because even Palomino tells it in his biography of
49:14
VelΓ‘zquez is that VelΓ‘zquez himself makes a copy of his portrait and how well
49:20
All critics think that it is the painting that is kept in the Wellington Museum in London
49:26
taken from Bonaparte's luggage
49:34
Pepe bottle's famous luggage
49:39
and that has ended Unfortunately in London and from these two portraits already
49:44
later copies of this portrait that is preserved as VelΓ‘zquez's circle
49:51
in the National gallery in Washington it is an extraordinary painting but much of it
49:57
of the critics think that it is not by VelΓ‘zquez Bueno also tells us about the success of the paintings
50:07
briefly, as if at a slide, I'm talking about the technique and
50:13
a little of VelΓ‘zquez's resources but now I want to focus on those, what I said in plural, those techniques, those tricks
50:20
of VelΓ‘zquez also linked with his technique and that we can
50:26
and that we can bias the general to give it greater importance, for example
50:32
color in VelΓ‘zquez I have brought a photocopied list of pigments that already in its day
50:39
Carmen Garrido said, I think that practically nothing could be modified, it's the pigments they used.
50:45
all the painters in the case of VelΓ‘zquez It is true that he uses and here I have brought this slide
50:51
pigments such as lapis lazuli that were not available to all painters in the blue gun and were more expensive than the
50:58
gold and was a pigment that many painters used
51:03
especially on the surfaces, for example. I am now remembering the case of the Tintoretto lavatory that is
51:09
painted with azurite and then gives it a series of shines with pus lazuli doing the trick that all the blue is
51:15
lapis lazuli sometimes from the descendants of Van Der Weyden. By the way, it has been said that it is the most
51:21
expensive from the Prado Museum because the quantity and quality of the blue pencil
51:26
and the mantle of the Virgin is extraordinary
51:31
and well three three pieces of information only about the color
51:37
which are the usual green ones used by celebrities
51:42
VelΓ‘zquez's greens are practically 99.9% mixing these famous blue
51:50
greens are not beautiful, you are not mixing blue with yellow and when
51:58
If you look at them in detail you see that they are indeed green, what they seemed to you from a distance is that they are
52:03
practically blue also does not mean that there are times when the mixture of yellow is scarce
52:10
or the red ones with azurite and lacquer
52:16
of cochineal lacquer has achieved these shades of red by playing with the
52:22
transparencies of the background with the densities mixed with lead white, mixing the Zurita with the lacquer to
52:30
the purple ones or the black ones, the famous black ones of
52:36
VelΓ‘zquez are almost all made with carbon black
52:42
In some points it has black smoke but look no
52:50
Van Gogh said. In an atheist letter his brother said, Hey, why do they criticize me for using black people? I haven't.
52:56
used Franks Rembrand VelΓ‘zquez
53:02
Boza spoke about the details that I loved it, I'm going to do it
53:07
Look, I don't remember the word no but it's true that VelΓ‘zquez seems to be painting not with the brush, just the brush.
53:14
loose bird that says what Rafael Alberti says, not that he paints carelessly, however, if one studies him, VelΓ‘zquez
53:21
It is full of details and those details done very quickly and precisely are
53:27
always informative about many things, boza did not talk about the clearance of the palace, no
53:34
the lack of shrinkage, which is something that is a very good term, I copied it for that reason because it also has to do with
53:40
the technique Not that that way of painting Well look here not these
53:45
elements truly of technical deployment, not that for that in part
53:50
painted this painting is the one that VelΓ‘zquez brought to Madrid to teach in the palace and then he had the
53:58
opportunity when Fonseca died to catalog and inventory Fonseca's collection and
54:06
gave his own painting the highest value I have taken as a detail as an example to
54:15
the details this painting that seems to have almost no details This is the nineteenth-century image that we actually have the
54:22
picture with good photography gives this Vision
54:29
and I have brought a series of details from the painting in addition to the crudeness that could go unnoticed not by some
54:36
elements Here we see how there are nails below
54:41
The wood even one of the nails has a metallic shine that holds the super year is not something that could happen
54:48
unnoticed and that VelΓ‘zquez has bothered to paint then there are drops of lacquer but there are also some drops of
54:55
of vermilion I don't see it here but I'm going to point it out to you
55:02
How do I see myself, not that they denote a level of loving?
55:08
get into the details good surprising
55:15
how blood made with lacquer appears on Jesus' side and some
55:22
shines of water that are telling us that the Roman soldier has just taken
55:30
the spear from the chest of Jesus and has sprouted, as the Gospel of Saint John says, Blood and Water, which is a theme that also
55:37
Van Der does in his crucifixion in the painting that is preserved in the
55:43
escorial detail therefore of certain importance and iconographic and speaking of importance
55:48
iconographically, a disputed topic is whether Jesus was crucified naked as was the
55:55
custom in Roman crucifixions part of
56:01
The heartbreaking thing about the crucifixion was the humiliation of being exposed to the crucifixion and being stared at like the
56:08
blood that falls from it passes under the cloth and goes underneath in some way
56:14
VelΓ‘zquez is informing us of something that appears in the apocryphal gospels, the Gospel of James speaks
56:21
that a person felt sorry for Jesus and ran and put the cloth on him or Saint MarΓa JesΓΊs de Γgreda speaks of
56:29
that the executioners who were going to undress Jesus paralyzed the hands is that Santa MarΓa de JesΓΊs de Γ‘greda is very opportune
56:36
because she is the nun with whom Felipe IV regularly corresponded
56:43
Well, he talks about how the executioners who were going to take away the purity cloth had their hands paralyzed.
56:49
here again the lacquer blood but also with small drops of vermilion that fall here on the knots of the
56:56
wood the gray of the hand the greenish gray of a dead hand
57:02
or how he has differentiated the tone of the wood of the scaffold, which is what The prisoner of Speed was carrying is that it is the
57:10
wood that was always nailed to the Calvary as it has simulated even the
57:15
spikes that encased the two pieces in the adoration of the magi, the
57:23
stars a Good theme of great relevance and iconography and it is a theme that measures what is measured in my photos at size
57:30
real scale measures two centimeters and three, it's nothing, no, and yet it's there, and it's also on the edge so in the
57:37
edge that right now I guess it will be hidden, look. Where the edge of the painting is, it will be hidden because of what it bites.
57:43
the frame of the painting not or the sparks not coming out of La Fragua
57:53
Finding this expression of amazement is listening as Apollo tells him.
57:59
He is telling Vulcan To the poor Vulcan that his wife is cheating on him, no, but notice how well
58:05
how good the expression of absolute astonishment is, just as the
58:11
Another day Fernando MarΓas commented that I think it is a discovery too.
58:16
the blind gaze of the old woman frying eggs, which is also
58:22
It is true that he is not looking at the child and the truth is that when he said it, no, I had never read it and it seems to me that
58:27
is right and then those delicate and slightly stuttering hands, not one of the
58:33
of the blind people touching the things that happen to the old woman frying eggs I don't think what she talked about thematization
58:40
the touch is very very successful
58:45
the slime falling from VelΓ‘zquez's horses that refer to the portraits of
58:53
rubens where that happened which in turn refers to the equestrian portraits
58:58
of a literary type because they are not preserved from apelles or these species of parts that are
59:07
coming out from under the spider becoming a spider that can be
59:12
the legs of the spider as cited in the translations of some of the
59:17
translations from the 16th and 17th centuries that VelΓ‘zquez may have had in his workshop
59:24
Another of the key topics to understand VelΓ‘zquez's resources is the issue of tracing, no one doubts in this specific case
59:30
that the original painting is that of the Prado and everyone accepts that of the
59:36
private collection in Madrid on the right as a work also by VelΓ‘zquez in the same way that many doubt that the
59:42
foreign private collection which is the one in the center Pardon be by VelΓ‘zquez
59:51
However, the two copies are closer to each other than either is to the original, perhaps if
59:58
accepts one of the copies as original, the other must also be accepted or if
1:00:04
none is affected reject the two not the two copies technically fabric preparation x-rays are very close
1:00:11
by VelΓ‘zquez but they lack quality; however, if you think about an assistant, the works are too good and
1:00:18
too rare, because an assistant would have tried to copy the vibration of the colorist's face, something that the copyist has not
1:00:25
made an optimistic solution In these very abundant cases in VelΓ‘zquez it would be
1:00:32
to think that VelΓ‘zquez copied them but because of the fatigue of repeating himself and above all because of not having the model in front of him because
1:00:38
copy from life as Pacheco advised and as he criticized
1:00:44
carducho no, what did these painters who copy from nature say, I tell you how
1:00:50
like the summary, that's not why I'm criticizing those who copy from nature and
1:00:57
concludes That is why I would say that it must be studied from nature and not copied
1:01:07
that copying made a work of poorer quality But this would lead to having to talk about a first-class VelΓ‘zquez
1:01:13
division and a second-class VelΓ‘zquez, also original, which is something that today is not accepted. The pessimistic solution is
1:01:21
that an assistant did it but it brings a new problem This young artist in Seville VelΓ‘zquez did not have an assistant
1:01:28
capable of making works that we have to describe as very good, very good if we do not compare it with The Originals, which is
1:01:35
precisely those that the Velasquistas rightly say must be done and what
1:01:40
had when he had just opened the workshop in Seville, this has to be given, there has not been a problem that
1:01:47
there is still no solution given regarding VelΓ‘zquez this is not the face
1:01:52
from that of Sister JerΓ³nima de la Fuente
1:01:58
del Prado And this is the copy
1:02:07
on this topic of VelΓ‘zquez not VelΓ‘zquez wrote the article about which I have said that I even gave a title that
1:02:13
It was almost a rhyme and the final conclusion of the article wrote a long article
1:02:18
explaining the brush cleanings the type of support used but but the
1:02:24
final conclusion of the article is that many times we have to say whether it is VelΓ‘zquez or not VelΓ‘zquez for a reason
1:02:29
so taken by the hair, so complicated to define what quality is, no
1:02:35
This is the detail of what photographed
1:02:41
The screen, let's say of the National gallery, of the website launches the gallery where this painting that I think
1:02:48
which is by VelΓ‘zquez and also means people of more authority like Fernando MarΓas who were the first
1:02:54
I read it to him or Cruz Baldovinos. Well, it continues to be attributed with
1:03:00
possibly to the disciple of VelΓ‘zquez's son-in-law and disciple Juan Bautista
1:03:06
MartΓnez del Mazo well, I'm not going to explain this to you in
1:03:12
detail because because we are already on the edge of time but the issue of tracing
1:03:17
that in Seville it was a way to make the work profitable, in Madrid it became
1:03:27
almost a professional obligation because Blaska's obligation was to make the king's portraits and nurture the image
1:03:33
real to different places and in many cases to VelΓ‘zquez himself, as in this case he had to copy himself in
1:03:41
This case is VelΓ‘zquez modeling himself, there are very slight differences in quality that cannot be noticed, but
1:03:48
Nobody doubts that these are two paintings by VelΓ‘zquez and they are identical at the same size
1:03:53
The tracing process, which I will tell you very briefly, is this: on a painting already made, a piece of paper was taken and
1:04:02
shaved the shaving way of making a paper transparent already come in the
1:04:09
first treaties that we preserve, which is by giving them different coats of oil to
1:04:14
make it more and more transparent, these papers were sticking to each other
1:04:20
Here I have shown how glued with sealing wax could be simply glued and once done the composition was traced.
1:04:28
that was below, these tracings did not have to be of the complete painting, it was more in VelΓ‘zquez
1:04:34
We are certain that they were not from the complete painting because one part and another are traced, for example this painting
1:04:40
with respect to that of the Metropolitan in New York and then the tracings do not fit exactly, it is like VelΓ‘zquez
1:04:46
I would have made the top part and then the bottom part separately and fitted it together with some
1:04:51
centimeters of difference when you had already contoured the profile of the frame the
1:04:59
painting that you wanted to do, you turned it over, you already had it, you turned it over and outlined those areas with charcoal
1:05:08
that you wanted to transfer to the tracing, then that was put on the surface
1:05:15
primed of a Canvas and the profiles were reviewed again, making sure that by removing the paper they had remained
1:05:21
marked the outline that they wanted to trace, I had the painting at the same size copied and now
1:05:30
then you had to paint. This is what they did with the nuns. What happens is that then the paint on the nuns has faded.
1:05:36
become much drier for reasons that, as I have told you, we do not know
1:05:41
This is almost impossible, you will see that it is by working as a team that these two paintings were attributed to each other and I have given you
1:05:48
two two details a little bit dramatic in that sense, not the picture made
1:05:55
With almost nothing it looks like it's a watercolor and perhaps the clumsiest of the entire series.
1:06:00
of the equestrian portraits in the hall of kingdoms, which is that of Margaret of Austria. And these paintings, well, they are attributed
1:06:08
to VelΓ‘zquez then VelΓ‘zquez and the workshop have been nuanced but they were paid to
1:06:13
he is saying that they were leaving his workshop
1:06:18
These are the paintings and we see by technically studying these paintings that
1:06:23
They were paintings that were printed according to the guidelines. No, I'm not going to tell you that VelΓ‘zquez himself printed
1:06:30
the paintings that have never been known if it is the head of the workshop who printed the painting, possibly it was done by a
1:06:36
assistant following guidelines but they are following VelΓ‘zquez's rules
1:06:41
and about him as we highlighted in an article by Javier PortΓΊs in which
1:06:47
We collaborate RocΓo DΓ‘vila The restaurateur and I highlighted that once
1:06:54
Once the painting was primed, the sketch must have been VelΓ‘zquez's own, which is something
1:07:01
that due to the ambition of all these portraits, ElΓas Tormo already said it in 1912
1:07:07
saying, they are paintings so brave and with such compositional ambition that they had
1:07:13
than VelΓ‘zquez himself sketched and he is indeed right, as has been proven by the infrared reflectography that we have
1:07:19
made a few years ago no this is the contrast not the one I have given you
1:07:26
since VelΓ‘zquez makes the head of the horse and how The assistant in these
1:07:33
MartΓnez del Mazo collaborated on paintings and an assistant collaborated whose name we have not yet been able to give.
1:07:41
And how VelΓ‘zquez once the assistant says sketch passes The assistant to
1:07:47
work in detail everything that VelΓ‘zquez had ordered and VelΓ‘zquez goes back over the painting and corrects what he
1:07:54
consider and here you see how the hand painted by the assistant has been
1:07:59
completely corrected by VelΓ‘zquez, I particularly like this detail like the escarcela of the
1:08:07
plaster has later been smudged by VelΓ‘zquez wanting to hide all those
1:08:14
details that the poor assistant had patiently made
1:08:19
of course here, as in all many of VelΓ‘zquez's paintings, of course the
1:08:24
Innocent the tenth the copy that I have told you or these paintings are copied from each other. Here we see that the
1:08:31
assistant or VelΓ‘zquez himself traced a portrait of Mariana in a painting that
1:08:37
a portrait of VelΓ‘zquez was already preserved either as VelΓ‘zquez or the assistants
1:08:45
which was already preserved from that of Queen Isabel de BorbΓ³n
1:08:53
o This example that perhaps you have already been given of how something also strange
1:09:00
not the cardinal chenny that where everyone appreciates that the
1:09:05
painted head of the cardinal is made by VelΓ‘zquez While all the elements of the composition are
1:09:12
probably made by Pietro MarΓa Neri, well it's easy to make up a story
1:09:19
with this they did not ask him for the portrait that VelΓ‘zquez said he did not have with that phlegm that seems to put a little
1:09:25
Felipe IV was nervous or maybe he liked it but he said he didn't have time.
1:09:31
says Well, make me the head, no And this is what appears in this painting, it is a very typical head of VelΓ‘zquez's work.
1:09:37
second trip to Italy and yet from the neck VelΓ‘zquez has already disappeared
1:09:44
well regarding the composition I have taken the title here a little
1:09:50
emblematic of of is that no I don't see it here well it was
1:09:57
by Diego Angle, a book that has how he composed his main paintings that
1:10:02
It is a delicious book By the way and good and we see a little what I have gone too
1:10:08
explaining not how VelΓ‘zquez from the first moment until practically the drunks is doing and
1:10:15
They are also words of Jonathan Brown who says it so that I am not accused, they are just a kind of still lifes
1:10:21
some still lifes that, as Pacheco said, still lifes are a minor painting and maybe even less if he paints it.
1:10:27
Damn no, you don't know how he paints them, no, and well, those are paintings.
1:10:34
extraordinary Not to me one of my favorite paintings by VelΓ‘zquez is this one of the water bearer of Seville where I already said
1:10:40
Peter Cherry the conference that a little the boy in the background is a little bit the Jose Nieto of Las Meninas, not the character who
1:10:48
is at the bottom are But this is where in some way the great the great is given
1:10:54
step here are figures that have volume on their own, it is like a gallery almost of sculptures, not that where you can border
1:11:00
each of the figures and even more complex a painting like the surrender
1:11:06
from breda Where playing with those masses of characters still continues to create
1:11:12
spaces not like the space that exists around here, the gap that has created it through the light that falls on this
1:11:18
character is a bit like very impressive these are the pictures but here what
1:11:25
I wanted to point out to you this this detail these are the pictures of the battle room of the Kingdom Hall according to the
1:11:31
layout of the inventory of 1701 which is quite interesting because there is like a row where well vulgarly some
1:11:39
historians say the old painters and here the young ones don't know where maΓno has gotten that could belong to the
1:11:46
old but he has a young spirit and has gotten involved with zurbarΓ‘n VelΓ‘zquez Leonardo
1:11:53
It is interesting because of the confrontation of some paintings with others and from there it has
1:12:00
I deduced what from these white signatures with which I began the conference because the white signatures of VelΓ‘zquez without signature
1:12:05
none of them were in front of the super-historical carducho signatures with gold letters and could create a contrast
1:12:12
interesting here what catches my attention the most
1:12:18
This of this Vision is that you will see that a strange thing has been done that no one has done And it is that it has distanced the
1:12:24
characters, all the characters are very Zen-like, very on the edge of the composition and VelΓ‘zquez has put them
1:12:31
internally, the surrender of Vereda was the only battle in which the
1:12:38
considerably the scale from the protagonists, thus increasing the spatial distance between the scene
1:12:44
represented and the viewer something that was fundamental Leonardo Da Vinci himself says that the painting
1:12:51
You have to look at it from three times the width of the painting, something that could not happen in the
1:12:58
hall of kingdoms the hall of kingdom measured 10 meters wide and there were paintings that measured four almost four and a half no
1:13:04
there was that distance, saying that was already a problem from the start, no
1:13:09
a subtle and I speak one is used is a subtlety
1:13:16
not but important that it plays in favor of a naturalness opposed to the theatrical and artificial narration of
1:13:24
the generals of the other paintings Even in those of ZurbarΓ‘n or Giuseppe Leonardo set that extracted to size
1:13:32
real a carducho general with spinola the general represented by VelΓ‘zquez
1:13:37
look what happens This is the actual scale size, it cannot
1:13:43
see the radicality of the VelasqueΓ±a proposal not with respect to other characters
1:13:51
In the naked eye x-rays, even the general x-ray, it is seen that the corner of the squares are
1:13:56
cut and it's good, it's something that was already known, no
1:14:03
It even looks partly invisible but it was confirmed with the x-rays that
1:14:09
They did well that the 80s were in the Museum but being cut off and knowing
1:14:18
knowing the spaces of the hall of kingdoms all the interpretations of
1:14:24
Of the kidnapping portraits placed on the walls of the room, the corners were inevitably cut because they did not fit.
1:14:31
the paintings because it was known that the height of the balcony was five meters and 30 well in the article which is that
1:14:39
we wrote with with Javier we gave this hypothesis I had it with
1:14:46
emotion with the emotion of the researcher who is penetrating a topic such as
1:14:51
incredible and my friends when I told it to them before it finished they told me hungry no that's in Las Puertas I
1:14:58
They have always investigated me these two years and now they tell me but well, it was good because deep down it is evidence of
1:15:04
where they should be, the interpretation was much more complex than the interpretation that until then had been
1:15:10
fact and that is that the piece of cut corner had been kept behind the
1:15:15
painting in a warehouse and when the paintings were removed from good retirement and taken to the new palace someone
1:15:22
He remembered Hey, let's put the corners that we removed was much more unlikely
1:15:28
not good at this. This is precisely what is being worked on now with the restoration of the queens hall But the
1:15:34
idea was essentially This is not true that when it was opened that when it was
1:15:41
He accessed the living room through one of the side doors that gave access to the
1:15:46
balcony because this kind of trompe l'oeil was created, although the painting moved
1:15:52
a bit
1:15:59
well the pentimentis the changes the reuses already for example in this
1:16:04
You are seeing something that is already seen invisible in the paintings, which are the changes in the horses' legs and here it seemed appropriate to me and it has
1:16:12
made kind of illusion bring the photography of Carmen Garrido's own book where all the is that in
1:16:19
VelΓ‘zquez all the changes are significant and they are important and so it is a bit painful to bring to
1:16:24
collation only some instead of all Well, in the book VelΓ‘zquez had evolution, you cannot review table by
1:16:30
I describe VelΓ‘zquez's changes and some are so significant that I have started with the most significant of them.
1:16:36
everyone that under VelΓ‘zquez's head in las meninas appears the portrait of what looks like another person is
1:16:43
a change because the meninas partly makes sense because VelΓ‘zquez is portraying himself among the family of the
1:16:50
No King and let another person appear, well, it's a change.
1:16:57
significant and significant this with respect to the changes with respect to the
1:17:03
reuse here you see below the x-ray that another head appears
1:17:08
It is Cardinal Infante himself
1:17:15
that he portrayed himself upside down and that VelΓ‘zquez, for some unknown reason, may not have liked it.
1:17:21
As the painting was coming out, he turned the Canvas over and it was face down to
1:17:26
always that first portrait here the head of one of the drunks
1:17:31
Notice how here he is using The Cape of the Brush that Carducho talks about
1:17:37
Not in the treaty on the back of the brush to bead part of the fingers
1:17:42
o This change that is seen with the naked eye like many of VelΓ‘zquez's changes when one already knows them, one sees them
1:17:49
in painting is not a change that also has its importance not because it is opening
1:17:55
It is making room for the character behind it, who otherwise would be a little absent from the composition, this one too.
1:18:03
important good the changes in the horse's legs the lower lances This is a
1:18:09
iconically also important or this of the also famous of the head
1:18:15
of a vulcan in another position, not that it also looks invisible, notice how that head can be sensed here, no, but everything
1:18:23
This brings me to a new concept of change that I think has gone unnoticed on many occasions precisely because it is so obvious.
1:18:30
They are composition changes discovered through technical documentation but rather small changes with respect to the
1:18:37
reality of things Well, attention has already been drawn, for example, that it would be impossible for Philip IV and
1:18:43
Margarita were portrayed in the mirrors of the meninas that size at the distance at which they were would appear
1:18:49
infinitely smaller VelΓ‘zquez uses reality at his convenience
1:18:57
look at the vulcan head and
1:19:04
not how it has been modified, here I put both, not this is the one I have
1:19:10
modified in Adobe Photoshop And this is the real one Not maybe what has lengthened the neck in an unnatural way
1:19:16
of vulcano is two three centimeters But the important thing is that the
1:19:21
reality in favor of expressiveness, not in this case of astonishment, it is a face that seems out of place, not
1:19:31
or the legs, look at the legs of Philip IV in this case. Well, you see again what the changes look like below.
1:19:38
from the portrait of Philip IV appears from this portrait of 1628 appears Philip IV of
1:19:44
1624, which in turn is traced on the painting of the Metropolitan. Well, these are
1:19:51
the legs and look at these like this they appear ridiculous not almost like
1:19:58
a person twice as small not to this type of subtle but important change the reality This is what
1:20:04
I have modified and this is the real one to these types of subtle changes but
1:20:10
important, an explanation must be given taking into account technical aspects, for example tracings, aspects
1:20:15
visual or decorative not Where the painting is going to be placed, for example to me
1:20:21
It has always seemed to me that the painting Margaret of Austria's horse, the Hall of Kingdoms, had a lot of problems.
1:20:27
but it is some strangeness that disappears when the painting is hung one size at a time.
1:20:35
a height to which he is never exposed, which is one meter 45, which is possibly what he was exposed to in the classroom.
1:20:41
kingdoms or the belly of Baltasar Carlos's horse, to give an even more famous example, you also have to have
1:20:48
take into account pictorial aspects, not narrative expressiveness as in the case of Vulcano or Moda, not the elegance of
1:20:54
thin legs like in this case no one might also think no
1:21:00
I am going to say this very briefly through the composition changes in
1:21:06
the siranderas good to propose to recover the
1:21:12
hypothesis discarded since Angulo gave it for the first time in 1948, which was that in the
1:21:20
scene the first scene of the spinners also represents the matter
1:21:26
mythological is something that all historians have discarded but in radiography and reflectography there is
1:21:33
a series of composition changes that indicate that VelΓ‘zquez worked intensely in that area and are and are
1:21:39
changes of significant type for example this this character was looking at before
1:21:44
from the front he is now looking at this character here and it led me to propose a vision of the story
1:21:52
Ovid's narrative that had not been taken into account until then was what the old woman, the goddess disguised as
1:22:01
old woman is going to warn aracne not to confront the Goddess to what aracne
1:22:06
He says that she defeats the goddess and so on. And then the confrontation comes and this, for example, is
1:22:12
an engraving that looks similar is precisely the engraving that comes in
1:22:18
two of the editions that historians independently think may have
1:22:25
have VelΓ‘zquez in his library because he knows the inventory of the books he had, which is
1:22:31
Ludovico Dolce from Venice of 1568 and the metamorphoses of which it is the
1:22:38
translation of the licentiate Viana of 1590
1:22:44
what and look like Well then Even if this was really palas athena
1:22:51
It would even be permissible to imagine that the famous spinning wheel symbolizes Athena's shield, not the goddess's ejido.
1:22:59
Here we end up going a little over time and leaving so many behind.
1:23:04
things could not be talked about Eternally about VelΓ‘zquez Javier said it for your cons
1:23:09
Regarding precisely the meninas in the documentary film, the painting does not say
1:23:16
VelΓ‘zquez has known how to be ambiguous enough so that we continue mulling over the meaning
1:23:21
of his lifelong paintings, it is impressive to see at the end of this journey
1:23:28
these two images these two details that separate almost 40 years different
1:23:34
different fabric primer different way of understanding the portrait one as vera effigy of a good
1:23:42
The nuns of the Poor Clares convent of Seville surely understood that she was a Saint, not that she was going to die.
1:23:48
Filipinos to found a convent and that they would never see her again, no, and it is more in the inscription that appears. This is the
1:23:55
figurine like and has the charming face of an infanta in the most beautiful portrait
1:24:01
unsuspected of a royal family that has ever been painted a technician studies
1:24:06
These two images are technically with the x-rays and it would be impossible for them to
1:24:11
came to the conclusion that they were made by the same artist but the same artist uniting, embracing these two worlds, the
1:24:18
VelΓ‘zquez's story, more than the glory of a man, represents the triumph of painting and this was largely done
1:24:23
Thanks to that indisputable miracle, impossible and simple, striking as well as silent, of his technique. Many