Greco, El (1541-1614). Cretan-born painter, sculptor, and
architect who settled in Spain and is regarded as the first great genius of the
Spanish School. He was known as El Greco (the Greek), but his real name was
Domenikos Theotocopoulos; and it was thus that he signed his paintings
throughout his life, always in Greek characters, and sometimes followed by Kres
(Cretan).
Little
is known of his youth, and only a few works survive by him in the Byzantine
tradition of icon painting, notably the recently discovered Dormition of
the Virgin (Church of the Koimesis tis Theotokou, Syros). In 1566 he is
referred to in a Cretan document as a master painter; soon afterwards he went
to Venice (Crete was then a Venetian possession), then in 1570 moved to Rome.
The miniaturist Giulio Clovio, whom he met there, described him as a pupil of
Titian, but of all the Venetian painters Tintoretto influenced him most, and
Michelangelo's impact on his development was also important.
Among
the surviving works of his Italian period are two paintings of the Purification
of the Temple (Minneapolis Institute of Arts, and NG, Washington), a
much-repeated theme, and the portrait of Giulio Clovio (Museo di Capodimonte,
Naples). By 1577 he was at Toledo, where he remained until his death, and it
was there that he matured his characteristic style in which figures elongated
into flame-like forms and usually painted in cold, eerie, bluish colors express
intense religious feeling. The commission that took him to Toledo -- the high
altarpiece of the church of S. Domingo el Antiguo -- was gained through Diego
de Castilla, Dean of Canons at Toledo Cathedral, whom El Greco had met in Rome.
The central part of the altarpiece, a 4-m. high canvas of The Assumption
of the Virgin (Art Institute of Chicago, 1577), was easily his biggest
work to date, but he carried off the dynamic composition triumphantly. A
succession of great altarpieces followed throughout his career, the two most
famous being El Espolio (Christ Stripped of His Garments) (Toledo
Cathedral, 1577-79) and The Burial of Count Orgaz (S. Tomé,
Toledo, 1586-88). These two mighty works convey the awesomeness of great
spiritual events with a sense of mystic rapture, and in his late work El Greco
went even further in freeing his figures from earth-bound restrictions; The
Adoration of the Shepherds (Prado, Madrid, 1612-1614), painted for his
own tomb, is a prime example.
El
Greco excelled also as a portraitist, mainly of ecclesiastics (Felix
Paravicino, Boston Museum, 1609) or gentlemen, although one of his most
beautiful works is a portrait of a lady (Pollock House, Glasgow, c. 1577-80),
traditionally identified as a likeness of Jeronima de las Cuevas, his
common-law wife. He also painted two views of Toledo (Met. Museum, New York,
and Museo del Greco, Toledo), both late works, and a mythological painting, Laocoön
(National Gallery, Washington, c. 1610), that is unique in his oeuvre. The
unusual choice of subjects is perhaps explained by the local tradition that
Toledo had been founded by descendants of the Trojans. El Greco also designed
complete altar compositions, working as architect and sculptor as well as
painter, for instance at the Hospital de la Caridad, Illescas (1603). Pacheco,
who visited El Greco in 1611, refers to him as a writer on painting, sculpture,
and architecture. He had a proud temperament, conceiving of himself as an
artist-philosopher rather that a craftsman, and had a lavish life-style,
although he had little success in securing the royal patronage he desired and
seems to have had some financial difficulties near the end of his life. His
workshop turned out a great many replicas of his paintings, but his work was so
personal that his influence was slight, his only followers of note being his
son Jorge Manuel Theotocopouli and Luis Tristán. Interest in his art
revived at the end of the 19th century, and with the development of
Expressionism in the 20th century he came into his own. The strangeness of his
art has inspired various theories, for example that he was mad or suffered from
astigmatism, but his rapturous paintings make complete sense as an expression
of the religious fervour of his adopted country.
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