
A bearded man and a woman with a parrot: "Unrequited Love"
Jacob Jordaens·1637
Historical Context
This 1637 painting of a bearded man and woman with a parrot, subtitled "Unrequited Love," is characteristic of Jordaens' genre-inflected allegories of human folly. Unlike Rubens' idealized figures, Jordaens drew on observations of real Antwerp citizens, giving his allegories a direct, earthy quality that resonated with a bourgeois audience. Jacob Jordaens, the most productive and commercially successful painter in Antwerp after Rubens's death in 1640, dominated Flemish painting through the middle decades of the seventeenth century. His mastery of large-scale multi-figure compositions, his ability to orchestrate warm golden light across complex scenes of festivity and narrative, and his characteristic combination of Flemish earthiness with Baroque compositional ambition made him the natural heir to Rubens's tradition in the Southern Netherlands. His enormous output served the aristocratic, ecclesiastical, and civic patrons who continued to commission ambitious paintings even as the Flemish economy contracted in the later seventeenth century.
Technical Analysis
The painting combines portraiture-like naturalism with allegorical meaning, rendered in Jordaens' characteristic warm palette and vigorous brushwork, with the parrot adding both color and symbolic commentary on human behavior.
Look Closer
- ◆The parrot — perched between the two figures — functions as an allegorical prop: the talking bird was a standard emblem of foolish repetition and unrequited attention in Flemish emblematic art.
- ◆The woman's expression is angled away from the man, her attention on the parrot rather than the suitor — a visual enactment of the title's unrequited theme.
- ◆Jordaens renders the man's expression with the almost comic specificity of disappointed hope — earnest but unsuccessful — deriving humor from the gap between desire and reality.
- ◆The bearded man's elaborate collar and cuffs suggest he is no young gallant but a mature, wealthy suitor whose resources do not compensate for his lack of appeal to the woman.
- ◆The warm, direct light that Jordaens applies to all three — man, woman, parrot — treats them with equal visual dignity, suggesting that in Jordaens's world even human folly deserves honest illumination.



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