The story of Adam and Eve is one of the most enduring in the history of art. With its momentous subject—the creation of humankind—and riveting themes of seduction, deceit, punishment, and redemption, it has long captivated the imaginations of countless artists.
Dutch painter Joachim Wtewael recounts the tale in an exquisite oil on copper, executed between 1610 and 1615 that is now on loan to The Frick Collection from a private collector. This cabinet picture is displayed in the Octagon Room, where it hangs with paintings by Jan Van Eyck and workshop, Hans Memling, and Pieter Bruegel the Elder, Wtewael’s forebears in the northern artistic tradition. It will remain on view into February of 2015.
Wtewael’s languidly elegant Adam gazes at Eve as he tenderly pulls her toward him. In one balletic movement, Eve reaches with her right hand to pluck an apple from the tree’s branches—the fruit seemingly nudged into her grasp by the serpent—while offering another apple to Adam with her left. Birds and a monkey inhabit the verdant canopy above them, and an ensemble of feathered, furry, and reptilian creatures populates the landscape. One can imagine a cacophony of animal sounds emanating from the foliage. With his penchant for exaggeratedly graceful figures and theatrical compositions, Wtewael’s art is defined as Dutch mannerist, a broad description for the style that dominated Dutch art, with many variations, between 1580 and 1610. Dutch mannerism derived from the Italian High Renaissance and was introduced to the Netherlands by the many artists who had trained in Italy. The style was prevalent in Utrecht into the 1620s, even when no longer fashionable in Haarlem, Amsterdam, or The Hague.
A native of Utrecht, Wtewael probably received instruction from his maternal grandfather, the painter Joachim van Schuyck, and his father, Anthonis Wtewael, a glass painter. He then apprenticed with Joos de Beer before embarking on a trip to France and Italy between about 1588 and 1592. It was likely during his Italian sojourn that Wtewael first encountered paintings on copper, which became the artist’s support of choice for cabinet pictures: of the fifty-eight paintings he executed between 1592 and 1612, thirty are painted on copper. www.frick.org