Godefridus Schalcken (1643-1706): desire and intimate display

Date
2016
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University of Delaware
Abstract
Dutch seventeenth-century artist Godefridus Schalcken (1643-1706) was famed during his lifetime for his romanticized and evocative paintings of nighttime. My project situates his paintings and his persona in the framework of the late Dutch Golden Age, the history of nocturnal imagery, and the elegant style and sensual themes that appealed to viewers at the end of the seventeenth century. Schalcken flouted contemporary criticism that set darkness and beauty in opposition and instead invented a new graceful dark manner that continues to captivate beholders today. His extraordinary pursuit to become the leading artist of his day in the depiction of artificial light grew to be his defining artistic signature. Schalcken worked from circa 1670 to 1706, which coincided with the end of the Dutch Golden Age. In this era, the Dutch Republic suffered major economic and political setbacks that left artists in a state of flux. The only way to compete in the new market was to innovate, to strive to match one’s peers while also distinguishing one’s individual talent. Schalcken met this challenge by molding himself as a master of candlelight and a virtuoso of alluring nocturnal imagery. The figures in his paintings interact in late night flirtations and romantic liaisons, illuminated by the warmth of candlelight. His paintings beckon to the beholder with a subtle eroticism and they fulfill the early modern artistic goal to seduce the eyes of the spectator.
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