The Maids Of Honor: King Phillip IV Of Spain

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The shadowed interior of a stately manor opens up into a charmingly detailed world of imperial proportions. Barely in focus are immense classically inspired works about the divine source of creativity elevated near the top of the room, flanked on the bottom by the undefined reflections of a man and woman in a mirror. Six figures occupy the foreground, middle-ground, and background of the picture plane, the most notable of them all being a precious and angelic looking youth dressed in an exquisite silver dress. One of the most recognized works by Spanish Court Painter and Realist Diego Velázquez in 1656, “Las Meninas”, translated as The Maids of Honor, is famous for being thought provoking, one look at the massive oil painting will tell you …show more content…

Pushing the boundaries of what perception, representation, and reality epitomize in art. Seemingly, what has disguised itself as a candid portrait of a young royal aristocrat immersed into the everyday of court life has transformed into an influentially significant investigation about the phenomenon of material perceptibility. Ultimately, the portrayal of role representation has been reversed for the observer, creating a paradox about what the subject of this piece really is. Quintessential Velázquez work often includes a heavy emphasis on forms of classical and mental representations of observable reality, striving to use optics as a basis for reproducing his subjects, using pure observation. Through a much examined eye came a new life to depth and Optical realism in each painting, often utilizing the moment captured in time as a lasting memory or distinct observation. Velázquez’s radical use of inverted compositions, or positioning artistic elements contradictory to the norm, placed a new emphasis on the …show more content…

This swift twist in perspective provided a newly reverent and ingenious way of thinking about, viewing, and appreciating art and the artist which recreates such representations. These attributes of the artist were not celebrated as intellectually creative talents in the sociological viewpoint of Velázquez’s day, surprisingly, artistic endeavors were perceived as manual labor with no need for reasoning, contemplation, or abstract conceptualization. This Italian Renaissance inspired view of art being as significantly transcendent as poetry was not shared throughout Spain until the work of Diego Velázquez, culminating in the beautifully expressed enigma that is “Las Meninas”, still over three-hundred years

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