ROELAS, Juan de las - b. ~1570 Flanders, d. 1625 Olivares - WGA

ROELAS, Juan de las

(b. ~1570 Flanders, d. 1625 Olivares)

Spanish painter of Flemish origin. He was a native of Flanders but his entire documented career took place in Spain, where he played a major role in the transition from Mannerist to Baroque painting. He is one of the most important Spanish painters of the early 17th century; his work was extremely popular in his own time. He is sometimes called the Spanish Tintoretto; there are stylistic analogies between the two. His innovative style introduced the spirit of the early Baroque into painting in Seville at the beginning of the 17th century.

His paintings are naturalistic but have a transcendental quality, and his figures are endowed with an expressive vitality that contrasts with the physical and spiritual immobility of contemporary painting. Roelas used light, loose brushstrokes, with heavy, warm tonalities that contrast with the cool, chromatic tones, derived from Mannerism, that were favoured by his colleagues. In Seville he was first to combine realism and mysticism, an approach prevalent in 17th-century Spain.

He came from an aristocratic family, and his father was an admiral in the Spanish Navy. He held the office of chaplain throughout his life. He began his artistic training in Seville but may have completed it in Italy, as his work suggests an Italian influence. His paintings are in some cases derived directly from the late 16th-century Venetian school, in particular the work of the Bassano family. Roelas is documented in 1597 in Valladolid and worked in the city again when Philip III’s court was there. In 1603 he moved to Olivares, near Seville, acting as chaplain in the collegiate church. He must soon have left Olivares for Seville, where he was a priest in the church of El Salvador. During the next ten years he became a commanding figure in the art world, executing significant commissions for the cathedral and several local churches.

Between 1604 and 1606 he executed part of the paintings for the main reredos of the Jesuit church (now the university church) in Seville. He painted the Circumcision in the central canvas of this reredos, filled with large figures and a celestial scene, as well as the right-hand panel, the Adoration of the Shepherds, which is a more naturalistic work; he also painted a St John the Baptist and a St John the Evangelist, both situated in the upper part of the reredos. In 1608 Roelas contracted to paint the Triumph of St Gregory for the English Jesuits in Seville (University of Durham), also a St James at the Battle of Clavijo and a Pietà (both 1609; Seville Cathedral). Two important works are known to date from 1612: the Vision of St Bernard (Seville, S Andrés) and St Peter Released from Prison (Seville, S Pedro). His masterpiece is perhaps the huge Martyrdom of St Andrew (1609, Museo de Bellas Artes, Seville).

In 1617 Roelas decided to try his luck at the court and applied for a position as royal painter. His application failed, but he lingered in Madrid until 1621, the date he returned to his chaplaincy at Olivares, where he died in 1625.

Adoration of the Name of Jesus
Adoration of the Name of Jesus by

Adoration of the Name of Jesus

The style introduced by Roelas into Seville was not a radical departure from the work of the established local painters, which is probably why he found favour among traditionally minded ecclesiastical patrons. For instance, his first commission, the Adoration of the Name of Jesus, the central painting for the main altarpiece in the Jesuit church, is divided into heavenly and earthly zones, following a formula that was popular throughout Catholic Europe and especially in Seville.

Calling of St Peter and St Andrew
Calling of St Peter and St Andrew by

Calling of St Peter and St Andrew

The two panels from the chapel of the Flemish in the no longer existent College of St Thomas Aquinas in Seville, Calling of St Peter and St Andrew, and St Andrew Preaching, belonged to the altarpiece dedicated to St Andrew. The main theme of the ensemble was the work Martyrdom of St Andrew, and it also included a Baby Jesus in the tabernacle, both of which are now kept at the Fine Arts Museum in Seville.

The Calling of St Peter and St Andrew depicts the moment when Christ, walking by the sea of Galilee, called the fishermen Peter and Andrew and asked them to follow him and become “fishers of men”. The theme is treated in a naturalistic way, with rich colours, warm tones and smooth free-flowing brushstrokes. Roelas pays great attention to certain aspects of reality in this work, such as the tree trunk and the chain of psychological reactions of the characters.

Martyrdom of St John the Evangelist
Martyrdom of St John the Evangelist by

Martyrdom of St John the Evangelist

St Andrew Preaching
St Andrew Preaching by

St Andrew Preaching

The two panels from the chapel of the Flemish in the no longer existent College of St Thomas Aquinas in Seville, Calling of St Peter and St Andrew, and St Andrew Preaching, belonged to the altarpiece dedicated to St Andrew. The main theme of the ensemble was the work Martyrdom of St Andrew, and it also included a Baby Jesus in the tabernacle, both of which are now kept at the Fine Arts Museum in Seville.

This interest in the real world makes Juan de Roelas, a painter of Flemish descent, an accomplished master of early Naturalism. The gamut of human types listening to the explanations given by Christ’s disciple in St Andrew Preaching, the leaves and foliage surrounding the scene and the late Gothic architectural forms rooted in Flemish art which Roelas took from the common repertoire of religious prints, are the main features of this composition.

The Martyrdom of St Andrew
The Martyrdom of St Andrew by

The Martyrdom of St Andrew

The school of Seville progressed rapidly from Renaissance classicism to the naturalism of the Baroque. Pacheco was joined by other important masters, in particular Juan de las Roelas, one of whose monumental creations is the painting of St. James during the battle of Clavijo (Seville cathedral), dating from 1609, though even this is surpassed by the magnificent Martyrdom of St. Andrew, in the Seville Museum, a composition in which the painter’s interest in naturalism and his rejection of formalistic representation are revealed in the vitality of the details. The figures in the lower part of the picture are especially fine. The spatial values are rendered with visual fidelity.

The Martyrdom of St Andrew (detail)
The Martyrdom of St Andrew (detail) by

The Martyrdom of St Andrew (detail)

The school of Seville progressed rapidly from Renaissance classicism to the naturalism of the Baroque. Pacheco was joined by other important masters, in particular Juan de las Roelas, one of whose monumental creations is the painting of St. James during the battle of Clavijo (Seville cathedral), dating from 1609, though even this is surpassed by the magnificent Martyrdom of St. Andrew, in the Seville Museum, a composition in which the painter’s interest in naturalism and his rejection of formalistic representation are revealed in the vitality of the details. The figures in the lower part of the picture are especially fine. The spatial values are rendered with visual fidelity.

Vision of St Bernard
Vision of St Bernard by

Vision of St Bernard

The mature Roelas excelled at creating monumental altarpieces replete with figures and teeming with incident. However, he also brought new life to smaller, more intimate religious subjects, such as the Vision of St Bernard, executed for the hospital of San Bernard in 1611. Here the saint is represented in a study that is furnished with a shelf lined with parchment-bound books. In front of the bookcase is a realistic glass vase holding symbolic lilies. St Bernard is a portrait-like type with a narrow head, a sharp nose, and sunken eyes, and his face expresses silent rapture as the Virgin’s milk bathes his forehead. Roelas was able to capture as no Sevillian artist before him the intense piety, earthy realism, and love of spectacle that characterized the devotional practices of Andalusia, and thus he made a profound impact on many younger painters, notably Francisco de Zurbar�n.

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