Description
This vividly colored altarpiece was made in Antwerp, the center of religious learning in Catholic Flanders. In the mid-1500s when the Catholic Church mounted a defense against the spread of Protestant reforms, known as the Counter-Reformation, it encouraged the production of religious images that promoted Catholic doctrine, offering opportunities for artists like Rubens, Van Dyck, and Van Balen. Van Balen’s painting depicts the traditional theme of the Trinity, with God the Father holding the dead Christ and the dove of the Holy Spirit hovering above. Unusually, God wears the purple papal tiara, intended to emphasize the pope’s role as God’s true representative on earth. Encircling the figures of the Trinity are angels holding the instruments of Christ’s Passion. On the clasp of God’s elaborate cape is a small figure of Saint Barbara, perhaps a clue to the original location of the work in a chapel dedicated to her.
Provenance
The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, Ohio (1996-); (Konrad O. Bernheimer, Munich, sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art, 1996) (1996); (Alex Wengraf, London, sold to Konrad O. Bernheimer) (1993-1996); Private collection, Spain, consigned to Alex Wengraf (After 1984-1993); (Alex Wengraf, London, sold to a Spanish collector) (By 1984-); (Sale, Sotheby’s, London, April 16, 1980, no. 184, withdrawn) (1980); (Sale, Sotheby's, London, July 11, 1979, no. 37, bought in) (1979)
Accession Number
1996.26
Medium
oil on wood
Dimensions
Framed: 134 x 107 x 7 cm (52 3/4 x 42 1/8 x 2 3/4 in.); Unframed: 114.6 x 73.9 cm (45 1/8 x 29 1/8 in.)
Classification
Painting
Credit Line
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Marlatt Fund
Tags
Painting Baroque (1600–1750) Oil Painting Flemish
Background & Context
Background Story
Hendrik van Balen (1575-1632) was a Flemish painter known for the elegantly composed, richly colored religious paintings on copper that make him one of the most accomplished painters of the Flemish Baroque. The Trinity from c. 1620 depicts the Trinity in the elegantly composed, richly colored manner that distinguishes van Balen's best work from the more general religious painting of his contemporaries. Van Balen was known for his elegantly composed, richly colored religious paintings on copper—combining the elegant composition of the Flemish tradition with the rich color that copper supports allow—and the c. 1620 date places this in his most productive period.
Cultural Impact
The Trinity is important in the history of Flemish painting because it demonstrates the elegantly composed, richly colored manner that van Balen brought to religious subjects on copper as one of the most accomplished painters of the Flemish Baroque. Van Balen's elegantly composed, richly colored religious paintings on copper—combining the elegant composition of the Flemish tradition with the rich color that copper supports allow—represent one of the most accomplished traditions in Flemish Baroque painting, and the c. 1620 painting shows this tradition at its most elegantly composed.
Why It Matters
The Trinity is van Balen's elegantly composed Flemish Baroque: the Trinity rendered in the richly colored manner of one of the most accomplished painters of the Flemish Baroque. The c. 1620 painting on copper shows the elegant composition and rich color that make van Balen one of the most accomplished Flemish Baroque painters.