© Ashmolean Museum
The composition derives from Caravaggio's 'Entombment', but the figures are more personal than direct copies.
Provenance
Sold, Paris, Hotel Drouot, 19 April 1989; private collection.
© Ashmolean Museum
The composition derives from Caravaggio's 'Entombment', but the figures are more personal than direct copies.
Sold, Paris, Hotel Drouot, 19 April 1989; private collection.
Nominally inspired by Lucretius' De rerum natura, Piero di Cosimo's The Forest Fire takes its scientific subject and embellishes it with fantastical creatures from the artist's imagination: Bulls, bears, lions and deer-like creatures with human faces all flee wearily from a fire.
Rubens' portrait of Thomas Howard, 2nd Earl of Arundel dates from about 1629. The Earl was a great collector, and Rubens had painted the earl's wife a few years earlier on a visit to Antwerp. This drawing in pen and ink with a chalk base is unusually informal, reflecting perhaps the comfortable relationship between artist and patron.