Jusepe Ribera

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Jusepe Ribera

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Jusepe Ribera , c.1590-1652, Spanish baroque painter. He studied in Valencia and Rome but at an early age settled in Naples, then a Spanish possession. There, under the nickname of "Lo Spagnoletto" [little Spaniard], he achieved immense popularity and became court painter to the Spanish viceroy. In 1644 he was knighted by the pope. The influence of Caravaggio can be seen in Ribera's early works, somber in tone but dramatic in lighting contrasts and movement. Examples are Taste (c.1615; Wadsworth Athanaeum, Hartford, Conn.), Drunken Silenus (1626; Naples), and Martyrdom of St. Andrew (1628; Budapest). After c.1635, Ribera's art showed freer brushwork and brighter colors, often with silvery effects, in such works as Trinity (1636-37; Prado), The Martyrdom of St. Philip (1639; Prado), and Holy Family with St. Catherine (1648; Metropolitan Mus.). Ribera also produced a number of fine etchings. He is well represented in American museums, including the Hispanic Society, New York City, which has St. Paul. Ribera had many imitators in Italy and Spain.

Bibliography: See studies by E. Trapier (1952) and J. Brown (1973); exhibition catalog by C. Felton (1982).

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Ribera, José de

The Oxford Dictionary of Art | 2004 | | © The Oxford Dictionary of Art 2004, originally published by Oxford University Press 2004. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Ribera, José de (or Jusepe de Ribera) (bapt. Játiva, nr. Valencia, 17 Feb. 1591; d Naples, 3 Sept. 1652). Spanish painter, etcher, and draughtsman, active for all his known career in Italy, where he was called Lo Spagnoletto (the little Spaniard). He is recorded in Parma in 1611 and Rome in 1613, but little is known of his life before he settled in Naples (at the time a Spanish possession) in 1616. Naples was one of the main centres of the Caravaggesque style, and Ribera is often described as a follower of Caravaggio. However, although his early work is markedly tenebrist, it is much more individual than that of most Caravaggesque artists, particularly in his vigorous and scratchy handling of paint, and his later works are far removed from Caravaggio in style—rich in colour and soft in modelling. Similarly, his penchant for the typically Caravaggesque theme of bloody martyrdom has been overplayed, enshrined as it is in Byron's lines: ‘Spagnoletto tainted/His brush with all the blood of all the sainted’ (Don Juan, xiii. 71). He did paint some powerful scenes in this vein, notably the celebrated Martyrdom of St Philip (1639, Prado, Madrid; formerly identified as the Martyrdom of St Bartholomew), but his treatment is invariably dignified rather than merely gory. Moreover he was capable of great tenderness, as in the Adoration of the Shepherds (1650, Louvre, Paris), and his work is remarkable for his feeling for individual humanity. This feature is evident in his secular pictures as well as his religious works, for example in The Clubfooted Boy (1642, Louvre). His range of secular subjects was fairly wide, for he was the first Spanish painter to show much interest in mythological themes (Apollo and Marsyas, 1637, Mus. Royaux, Brussels) and he also created a novel type of picture in which he depicted philosophers as beggars or vagabonds (Archimedes, 1630, Prado). He was the leading painter in Naples in his period (Velázquez visited him during his second visit to Italy and probably during his first) and his work was influential in Spain (where much of it was exported) as well as in Italy. Giordano was among his pupils. His reputation remained high after his death, and until the Napoleonic Wars he and Murillo were virtually the only Spanish painters whose work was widely known outside their native country.

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Ribera: L'opera completa.(book by Nicola Spinosa Electa)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Apollo; 4/1/2005; ; 700+ words ; ...catalogue raisonne on Ribera for twenty-five years...Justus Lange. Research on Jusepe de Ribera has developed in important...obvious to this reviewer is Ribera's debt to the classical...out, for example, by Jusepe Martinez in his famous...
Another study for Ribera's early Adoration of the Magi.
Magazine article from: Apollo; 1/1/2004; ; 700+ words ; ...drawing of the Adoration of the Magi by Jusepe de Ribera (1591-1652) (Fig. 1). (1) Spanish by birth, Ribera spent almost the whole of his working...Valencian artist of the day. Precisely when Ribera arrived in Italy is unknown, but he...
A new Ribera drawing among Michelangelos: a drawing in the Ashmolean Museum long associated with Michelangelo is here attributed by Carmen C. Bambach to Jose de Ribera. One of his rare drawings in red chalk, it can be linked to the artist's well-known interest in grotesque faces.(Critical essay)
Magazine article from: Apollo; 9/1/2009; ; 700+ words ; ...with a radically different attribution, to Jose de Ribera (Jusepe Ribera, 'Lo Spagnoletto'), who, born in Jativa in 1591...securely attributed drawing from the late 1620s by Ribera (Fig. 6) and to his paintings from the later 1620s...
National Gallery's Ribera Gift; $5 Million Baroque Painting Fills Gap in Collections
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 12/22/1990; ; 636 words ; ...painting by the southern baroque master Jusepe de Ribera, gallery Director J. Carter Brown...9 million). It is the first Ribera to enter the museum's collection...It had targeted the areas that Ribera, a Spanish artist working in Italy...
BETWEEN HEAVEN AND HELL
Newspaper article from: The Record (Bergen County, NJ); 9/18/1992; ; 700+ words ; ...Late, 1 Star Early ART REVIEW JUSEPE DE RIBERA: SPANISH REALIST IN BAROQUE...comes to mind when viewing the Jusepe de Ribera exhibit, which opens today at...Illustrations/Photos: PHOTO - Jusepe de Ribera's "Saint Jerome and the Angel
THE EL PASO MUSEUM OF ART ANNOUNCES LECTURE PRESENTATION ON MARCH 20
News Wire article from: US Fed News Service, Including US State News; 3/19/2008; 466 words ; ...entitled:Saint Bartholomew and Jusepe de Ribera: Lo Spagnoletto: a Stepson...Favorite Son of the 17th Century, Jusepe de Ribera - Lo Spagnoletto. Ribera is...painted in 1643 at the height of Jusepe Ribera's career in the Kingdom of...
GREAT WORKS
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 3/14/2008; ; 700+ words ; ...Boy with the Club Foot (1642) Jusepe de Ribera Louvre, Paris; currently on...had in mind a painting such as Jusepe de Ribera's The Boy with a Club Foot...the love of God. The artist Jusepe de Ribera (1591-1652) is a master of...
A penchant for pain
Newspaper article from: Jerusalem Post; 1/21/2005; ; 700+ words ; ...forefather of Spanish Baroque, Jusepe (Jose) de Ribera (1591-1652) depicting the...god Apollo. As a young man Ribera, born in Valencia, traveled...impression on the art of Naples. Jusepe de Ribera introduced the highly expressive...
MUSEUM FINDS A MASTERPIECE IN STORAGE.(Living)
Newspaper article from: Albany Times Union (Albany, NY); 4/20/1991; 700+ words ; ...thought it had only a mere copy of Jusepe de Ribera's baroque masterpiece "The Mocking...conclusion that, yes, it was a Ribera, making it one of the masterpieces...appearance in a holiday window display. Ribera, a baroque court painter, created...
SKETCHY SIDE OF SPANISH MASTERS; RARE DRAWINGS POINT TO ARTISTS' DEVELOPING STYLE.(L.A. Life)
Newspaper article from: Daily News (Los Angeles, CA); 9/24/1999; 700+ words ; ...the highlights of the exhibition: Jusepe de Ribera's ``Adoration of the Magi'' (about 1620). ``This is Ribera's earliest known work, and it...always paid attention to the Virgin. Ribera has reinterpreted the story and...
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Jusepe Ribera. Wikimedia Commons (Public Domain)

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