Diego Velázquez – Las Meninas (1656-57)

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Introduction
Las Meninas was Velázquez’s largest oeuvre measuring 3.21 m by 2.81 m (Umberger 96). Velázquez’s masterpiece is one that draws sharp criticism ranging from those who find this work as a complete piece with its pictorial features prominent in the artwork, to those who find it hard to interpret its content conclusively (Ancell 159-160; Snyder 542+; Steinberg 48; Bongiorni 88). Despite such disparities, Velázquez’s masterpiece was able to project a day in the life of the royal family while at the same time achieving his artistic ideal. This work explores this artwork in light of the royal family and personal gratification by Velázquez as a celebrated artist.
Velázquez’s Portrait Paying Homage to the Spanish Royal Family
One of the most controversial aspects of the painting is the mirror in the background. However, despite some claiming that this is not a mirror, they agree that this painting depicts the King and the Queen (Brown 303; Umberger 100). The mirror allows King Phillip IV to command a unique presence in the painting that is projected throughout the painting. Standing at the center of this painting is Infanta Margarita who is five years old at the time of this painting (Umberger 97). Margarita was the only daughter of King Phillip IV and Queen Mariana (Umberger 97). Margarita is painted with her head turned slightly away to the left yet her gaze is prominent to the observer’s eye perspective. Her royalty is experienced in the difference in dressing depicted in the painting. Personalities of the royal family were adorned with the finest linen, an aspect that Velázquez inexplicably projects with utmost precision. The hair coloration on Margarita is different from that of other persons in the picture with her hair...

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...Kevin. "Velazquez, Las Meninas: Painting the Reader." Semiotica 2003.144 (2003): 87-100. Communication & Mass Media Complete. Web. 23 Nov. 2013.
Brown, Jonathan. On the Meaning of Las Meninas. In Images and Ideas in Seventeenth-Century Painting (1978). Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Kahr, Madlyn, Millner. “Velázquez and Las Meninas.” The Art Bulletin, 57.2 (1975): 225-246. College Art Association. Web. 23 Nov. 2013.
Snyder, Joel. “Las Meninas and the Mirror of the Prince.” Critical Inquiry 11 (1985): 539–572.
Steinberg, Leo. “Velázquez’s “Las Meninas.”” October 19 (1981): 45-54. The MIT Press. Web. 23 Nov. 2013.
Umberger, Emily. “Veláquez and Naturalism II: Interpreting “Las Meninas.”” Anthropology and Aesthetics 28 (1995): 94-117. The President and Fellows of Harvard College acting through the Peabody Museum of Archeology and Ethnology. Web. 23 Nov. 2013.

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