Jacob Jordaens (Antwerp 1593-1678)
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Jacob Jordaens (Antwerp 1593-1678)

Diogenes seeking a True Man

细节
Jacob Jordaens (Antwerp 1593-1678)
Diogenes seeking a True Man
oil on paper, laid on panel
20¼ x 24 5/8 in. (51.5 x 62.5 cm.)
来源
Eugène Broerman; sale, Giroux, Brussels, 21 March 1927, lot 13.
出版
R.A. d'Hulst, The Drawings of Jacob Jordaens, I, 1974, under no. 182.
注意事项
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 15% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

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Alexandra McMorrow
Alexandra McMorrow

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拍品专文

Diogenes, c. 400-325 B.C. from Sinope, the celebrated Cynic philosopher of Athens, was respected in the Netherlands in the seventeenth century for having abandoned his worldly goods and adopting an ascetic life. He is depicted here wearing only a loin cloth.
Illustrated is the notorious episode told by Diogenes Laertius, in his Lives of the Philosophers, which was adapted and popularized at third hand by the poet Joost van der Vondel in Den Gulden Winckel der Konstilevende Nederlanders of 1613. It is daylight and Diogenes lantern is lit; he is looking for a man in vain, for as he explains to the townsfolk '...in your hearts no reason lives...you are people in name but beasts in fact'.
Rubens was probably the first Netherlandish artist to treat the theme in his lost painting of circa 1618-20; when he was in Utrecht in 1627, he admired a painting of the subject that was being worked on in Honthorst's studio. The theme was to enjoy a brief vogue in the Northern Netherlands.
Jordaens famously treated it in the early 1640s in his painting at Dresden, the composition of which resembles that in the present work, especially in the portrayal of Diogenes himself. D'Hulst accepted the present work (presumably on the basis of a photograph or reproduction) in his discussion of the preparatory drawings (on two sheets) for the Dresden picture. It was most likely made in preparation for the execution of the larger picture that was offered at a Bukowski sale, 25 April 1956, lot 144.