Some of young Arcimboldo’s earliest works were 1549 commissions for stained glass windows at the Duomo. In 1556 he worked on Duomo di Monza stained glass windows and frescoes. In 1558, he drew the cartoon for a large tapestry of the Dormition of the Virgin Mary, in Como Cathedral.
Earth c1570
Private collection, Vienna
In the early 1560s, Arcimboldo was c36 when he left Italy to become a court portraitist to Hapsburg emperors Ferdinand I, Maximilian II in Vienna & Rudolf II in Prague. In 25 years in Holy Roman Empire courts, he designed stained glass windows, tapestries and theatre costumes. He mainly spent time browsing the Hapsburgs’ private collections of artworks and natural objects in Kunstkammer/art chamber.
At first Arcimboldo's conventional work concentrated on traditional religious themes. However The Hapsburgs wanted imaginative works that emphasised their claims to greatness and promoted an avant-garde atmosphere in their intellectual courts. So his later, redefined portraits of human heads were made differently. In place of the richly detailed facial features typically found in portraits, there were clever displays of fruits, vegetables, plants and animals. Both psychologically acute and scientifically accurate, his portraits were celebrated by his patrons & contemporaries, expanding traditional thinking. Although they were greatly admired, art critics debated whether these paintings were from a whimsical or a deranged mind. Most scholars believed that given the Renaissance fascination of the bizarre, this Renaissance Italian painter actually catered to contemporary taste.
Art historian Thomas Kaufmann wrote Arcimboldo: Visual Jokes, Natural History and Still-Life Painting 2009, noting the art conveyed the majesty of the rulers. The works were meant to amuse, but they also symbolised the: majesty of the ruler and power of the ruling family. Humour yes, but humour resolved seriously. Maximilian so liked this imagery that he and his courtiers celebrated in a 1571 festival orchestrated by Arcimboldo.
Maximilian II was fascinated with the natural world, and this interest in biology and other fields lured scientists and philosophers to his court. No surprise, then, that Arcimboldo’s first projects for Maximilian II the series The Four Seasons, which he started in 1563, and The Elements, completed in 1566, showed that love of science. Four Seasons comprised four profile portraits of figures created from natural materials like fruits, vegetables, flowers and plant life specific to summer, autumn, winter or spring. The Elements 1566 (Earth, Water, Fire and Air) featured haunting depictions of sea creatures, pearls and birds.
Private collection, Vienna
In the early 1560s, Arcimboldo was c36 when he left Italy to become a court portraitist to Hapsburg emperors Ferdinand I, Maximilian II in Vienna & Rudolf II in Prague. In 25 years in Holy Roman Empire courts, he designed stained glass windows, tapestries and theatre costumes. He mainly spent time browsing the Hapsburgs’ private collections of artworks and natural objects in Kunstkammer/art chamber.
At first Arcimboldo's conventional work concentrated on traditional religious themes. However The Hapsburgs wanted imaginative works that emphasised their claims to greatness and promoted an avant-garde atmosphere in their intellectual courts. So his later, redefined portraits of human heads were made differently. In place of the richly detailed facial features typically found in portraits, there were clever displays of fruits, vegetables, plants and animals. Both psychologically acute and scientifically accurate, his portraits were celebrated by his patrons & contemporaries, expanding traditional thinking. Although they were greatly admired, art critics debated whether these paintings were from a whimsical or a deranged mind. Most scholars believed that given the Renaissance fascination of the bizarre, this Renaissance Italian painter actually catered to contemporary taste.
Art historian Thomas Kaufmann wrote Arcimboldo: Visual Jokes, Natural History and Still-Life Painting 2009, noting the art conveyed the majesty of the rulers. The works were meant to amuse, but they also symbolised the: majesty of the ruler and power of the ruling family. Humour yes, but humour resolved seriously. Maximilian so liked this imagery that he and his courtiers celebrated in a 1571 festival orchestrated by Arcimboldo.
Maximilian II was fascinated with the natural world, and this interest in biology and other fields lured scientists and philosophers to his court. No surprise, then, that Arcimboldo’s first projects for Maximilian II the series The Four Seasons, which he started in 1563, and The Elements, completed in 1566, showed that love of science. Four Seasons comprised four profile portraits of figures created from natural materials like fruits, vegetables, flowers and plant life specific to summer, autumn, winter or spring. The Elements 1566 (Earth, Water, Fire and Air) featured haunting depictions of sea creatures, pearls and birds.
Spring, 1563
The allegorical paintings were full of visual Hapsburgs puns. The nose and ear of Fire were made of fire strikers, one of the imperial family’s symbols. Winter wore a cloak monogrammed with an M for Maximilian like a garment the emperor did own. Earth had a lion skin a la Hercules, to whom the Hapsburgs always traced their lineage.
This was the era of botany and zoology, when artists included Leonardo da Vinci (1452–1519), Arcimboldo’s predecessor in Milan, pursued natural studies. Arcimboldo suggested a scientific fluency that highlighted his patron’s learnedness. Every plant, every flower was recognisable!
Even the botany carried the theme of empire. Arcimboldo’s composites incorporated exotic specimens eg corn and eggplant, which sophisticated viewers knew were rare cultivars from the New World; where many European rulers hoped to extend their influence!
Arcimboldo’s subjects grow more varied over the years when he created portraits of specific professions and biblical figures while continuing to further his interest in natural phenomena. Among his most idiosyncratic paintings are The Librarian c1566; The Cook c1570 had a serving dish atop a wooden table that, when turned upside down, revealed a menacing face; and Adam and Eve 1578 showed the faces of a woman and a man composed of groupings of human bodies. King Augustus of Saxony visited Vienna in 1570 and 1573, and saw Arcimboldo's work; he quickly commissioned a copy of Four Seasons with his own monarchic symbols.
The Librarian c1566
Skokloster Castle, Sweden
A renaissance court artist had to produce flattering portraits of his sovereigns, to display at the palace and give to foreign dignitaries or brides. Arcimboldo remained with the Hapsburgs till 1587 and continued to paint for them after returning to Milan. It was in this last phase of Arcimboldo’s career, 1590, that he produced the composite portrait of his royal patron Holy Roman Emperor Rudolph II. Arcimboldo chose peapod eyelids and a gourd forehead, looking less royal and more vegetable.
A renaissance court artist had to produce flattering portraits of his sovereigns, to display at the palace and give to foreign dignitaries or brides. Arcimboldo remained with the Hapsburgs till 1587 and continued to paint for them after returning to Milan. It was in this last phase of Arcimboldo’s career, 1590, that he produced the composite portrait of his royal patron Holy Roman Emperor Rudolph II. Arcimboldo chose peapod eyelids and a gourd forehead, looking less royal and more vegetable.
In Milan in 1587, Arcimboldo continued painting meticulous groupings of lush fruits and vegetables, & distinctive plants. Four Seasons in One Head c1590, which some art historians considered a self-portrait, featured an angular face cut from a withered tree trunk and adorned with a pair of cherries on its ear; apples, grapes, and leaves atop its head; and flowers on its bust. Was it an earnest contemplation of mortality? Arcimboldo died in Milan in 1593.
**
The Kunstkammer was looted late in the Thirty Years’ War (1618-48), and some Arcimboldo’s paintings were carried from Rudolf II's collection to Sweden. A handful of his famous works, including Vortumnus c1590 and The Cook, are still part of Swedish collections today. Vortumnus was the Roman god of the seasons. The Prague Picture Gallery has some of his art from Prague Castle. Despite the years damage to the Prague Castle Gallery caused by war and fires, the gallery is very impressive.
Rudolf as Vortumnus, c1590
Skokloster Castle, Sweden.
Four Seasons in One Head, c1590
National Gallery of Art, U.S.Skokloster Castle, Sweden.
The legacy of Arcimboldo’s multiple images were only rediscovered in the early C20th by Surrealist artists, Arcimboldo art appeared in the works of Pablo Picasso, George Grosz, Rene Magritte and especially Salvador Dalí. The 1987 Arcimboldo Effect Exhibition at Venice’s Palazzo Grassi highlighted the meanings of the Grandfather of Surrealism’s art. And Arcimboldo shows have recently been at the National Gallery of Art in Washington DC 2010-11; Palazzo Barberini in Rome 2017; and now Exhibition Arcimboldo Face to Face, Centre Pompidou-Metz, May-Nov 2021.
24 comments:
His paintings are so clever and inventive, I'm unsurprised he found such favour through his career. I'd not seen the bookish librarian before - he's a real treat!
Modern art used to be dated to the start of the twentieth century. Now it might mean something else altogether.
Pipistrello
if Arcimboldo had never seen these types of portraits before, then he was truly clever and inventive. If there was no role model in his artistic past, where did the ideas come from?
I am still blown away by the originality of the works, produced by this previously ordinary lad from Milan.
LMK
if modern art is that art created in more or less the same era as the viewers and critics, then I would largely agree with you.
But if the modern artist dismissed the belief that art must realistically depict the world, then the result will be an experimental use of colour, unusual materials and often new techniques. If the artists are depicting their subjective experiences, realistic art is even less likely.
Bom dia. Impossível não se apaixonar por essas pinturas.
Luiz
sometimes there were amazing artists, architects etc from other eras and other parts of the world about which we know precious little. Even when I first saw Arcimboldo's art years ago, I had little appreciation of his talents.
Hello Hels, The Czech Surrealist animator Jan Svankmajer often animated Arcimboldo-esque figures--they are among his best films. Also, the Brothers Quay (disciples of Svankmajer) also did some great work with Arcimboldo--a great animation based on the Librarian figure is called, naturally enough, The Cabinet of Jan Svankmajer.
--Jim
Parnassus
I would never have found the Cabinet of Jan Svankmajer 1984, if it had not been for you. Many thanks, my friend. Look what the summary said: Arcimboldo, whose paintings and characters were featured heavily in this short; most notably the Librarian and characters from The Seasons, The Elements, and others: Vertumnus, Summer, Fire. In fact, a subtitle in the film is Portrait of Svankmajer a la Arcimboldo!
Hello Hels, If you love Arcimboldo, also check out Svankmajer's Dimensions of Dialogue and his very short film Flora. You will be amazed. These are from the Master, himself!
--Jim
This is a new artist for me. I am not familiar with his work at all so thank you for this post. His portraits are so different I would have thought of him as a much later artist.
So, Arcimboldo was the grandfather of surrealism; who was the father?
Well, I'm afraid I don't like his portraits with fruit, veggies, flowers etc..but I think the exhibition of his works in France might be worth a visit.
Jim - thank you for the reference to The Cabinet of Jan Svankmajer. The interwebs really are a trove of delights!
Parnassus
The Czechoslovakian Surrealist Group must have known what they were doing. I would normally not watch animated shorts, but Dimensions of Dialogue must have been very clever.
My beloved is Czech, by the way, and is very keen to familiarise himself with Svankmajer.
Fun60
agreed. For a very long time I assumed the concept of a 16th century Arcimboldo was faked by a
more modern artist. We must have been watching "Fake or Fortune?" too regularly :)
DUTA
I suggest Andre Breton was the father, when he officially moved away from the Dada movement by establishing Surrealism in 1924. But whether Breton claimed Arcimboldo as his own father..is open to discussion :) I also didn't admire Arcimboldo's work for years, thinking it too playful to be taken seriously.
But expand Earth c1570 (above) and see how clever the component parts are.
And expand Air 1566 (https://www.wikiart.org/en/giuseppe-arcimboldo/air-1566) to see the clever component parts here as well.
Pipistrello
I too am always delighted to hear from other bloggers about a topic we are currently discussing or in other peoples' older blogs that focused on themes I have loved for years. This morning, for example, somebody out of the blue provided new information about the 1893 Columbian Exposition in Chicago!! I will follow it up straight away.
Thank you for this Hels. I am blown away. I have now been reading about the exhibition because of your post and see that it looks very exciting and I wish I could go. Maybe, you never know, I might. Many artists are involved and one of my favourite artists, Annette Messager, has prepared a special piece of work for the show. Thank you again, I found this post so interesting. It is like Arcimboldo was a rock star and Maximilian II way ahead of his time along with him. Thank you.
Hi Hels - I'd love to get over to Paris to see this ... his works are extraordinary ... while the other links you've given us I'd love to explore sometime ... his art certainly fires my imagination. Lovely to see = thank you ... cheers Hilary
Rachel
the week we got married, Joe and I packed our back packs and passports, and moved away for 5 years. There were many wonderful things about living in Europe and Britain, but my very favourite was ready access to museums and galleries in general, and specialist exhibitions in particular. Even if our nation wasn't in lockdown because of Covid, I would still envy your ability to pick up over a weekend to see Arcimboldo in Metz or anything that tickles your fancy.
Hilary
Yes... you must... tell me which are the best Arcimboldos you see!
Although I am not 100% happy with uni lectures on Zoom, I am totally grateful to Zoom for my access to specialist art collections. Until Zoom was invented, my best connection to overseas exhibitions was via books and catalogues on paper, or later on line.
I have seen these around but knew nothing about them . I had assumed they were quite contemporary . I wonder if he was trying to portray us as part of nature a distinct from dominating nature as would have been the paradigm then and now? Also maybe a depiction of the idea the "we are what we eat" :) . They are remarkable pictures and seems extraordinarily sane from my point of view.
mem
My best guess is that Arcimboldo found his Habsburg patron was fascinated in the study of botany and zoology, as a result of the voyages of exploration and discovery that were sent to other continents then. When explorers returned with exotica, Maximilian made his court into a scientific study centre. His fruit/vegetable gardens, and zoos with large African animals, were hot! And as royal painter, Arcimboldo had ready access to these vast collections.
Jogo
do you have an interest in Giuseppe Arcimboldo? I hope so.
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