Rome and Velázquez.
Roman cultural interferences in the evolution of his style
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.24310/Eviternare.vi10.12972Keywords:
Rome, Baroque, Historiographic sources, VelázquezAbstract
Our professional practice, as well as the close friendship we have maintained over the years with Juan María Montijano, evokes us to relate him to the figure of the great baroque painter Diego Velázquez (1599-1660) and the two journeys he made to the city of the popes. Thus, and saving the logical differences, we can draw a certain parallel with the experiences of both of them in Baroque Rome.
Unlike Velázquez, whose palatial obligations at court limited his freedom and forced him to return with relative haste, Montijano, despite his commitment to teaching at the University of Malaga, was able to establish a long sequence of Roman sojourns that would span the rest of his life. It is in this sense and thanks to the greater ease and speed of means of transport that we can attribute greater fortune to the Sevillian painter, who had the opportunity to spend more time with and become more familiar with all the vestiges of the Eternal City.
We have long been interested in assessing artists' journeys and their itineraries or stays insofar as, on many occasions, they capture the experiences they have had in their works, just as we, from our journeys and/or stays, keep in our subconscious images and sensations captured. Sooner or later, and in an unconscious way, we repeat or rework them. They are what we understand as cultural interferences.
Like Velázquez, Juan María Montijano was seduced by the Roman spell. All of us have been enriched by these experiences and, in some way, they have been reflected in our writings, in our teaching and in our research.
Downloads
Metrics
References
Calderón de la Barca, P. (1640). Primera parte de Comedias de don Pedro Calderón de la Barca. Madrid: Viuda de Juan Sánchez. Recuperado de http://www.cervantesvirtual.com/obra-visor/el-sitio-de-breda--2/html/
Gállego, J. (1983). Diego Velázquez. Barcelona: Anthropos.
Pacheco, F. (1649). Arte de la Pintura, su Antigüedad y Grandezas, lib. I. Sevilla: Simón Fajardo.
Thuillier, J. (1974). La obra pictórica completa de Poussin. Barcelona: Noguer.
Trapiello, A. (2009). Troppo vero. Valencia: Pre-textos.
Tolnay, C. de (1961). Las pinturas mitológicas de Velázquez, Archivo Español de Arte tomo 34, nº 133, 31-46.
Van Gogh, V. y Vollard, A. (1911). Lettres de Vincent van Gogh à Èmile Bernard (1887-1890). París.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
All the contents published in Revista Eviterna are subject to the Creative Commons Reconocimento-NoComercia-Compartirigual 4.0 license, the full text of which can be found at <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0>
They may be copied, used, disseminated, transmitted and publicly exposed, provided that:
The authorship and original source of your publication (Journal, editorial and URL of the work) are cited.
They are not used for commercial purposes.
The existence and specifications of this use license are mentioned.
Copyright is of two kinds: moral rights and patrimonial rights. Moral rights are perpetual, inalienable, inalienable, inalienable, inalienable and imprescriptible prerogatives.
In accordance with copyright legislation, Revista Eviterna recognizes and respects the moral rights of the authors, as well as the ownership of the economic right, which will be transferred to the University of Malaga for dissemination in open access.
The economic rights refer to the benefits obtained by the use or disclosure of the works. Revista Eviterna is published in open access and is exclusively authorized to carry out or authorize by any means the use, distribution, disclosure, reproduction, adaptation, translation or transformation of the work.
It is the responsibility of the authors to obtain the necessary permissions of the images that are subject to copyright.