
Kruisdraging
Jacob Jordaens·1657
Historical Context
This 1657 Carrying of the Cross depicts Christ's path to Calvary, a subject that Jordaens treated multiple times throughout his long career. By the late 1650s, Jordaens had privately converted to Calvinism while continuing to accept Catholic commissions—a common pragmatic accommodation in the religiously divided Netherlands. 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 late work demonstrates Jordaens' continued command of large-scale religious narrative, with powerful figural forms and dramatic lighting effects that maintain the emotional intensity of his Baroque vision.
Look Closer
- ◆Jordaens depicts the Via Dolorosa procession with Flemish crowd specificity — soldiers, bystanders, weeping women — each face individually characterized rather than representing generic crowd types.
- ◆The cross's weight on Christ's shoulders is physically communicated through the forward lean of his body and the compression of his legs — Jordaens understands structural mechanics as well as emotion.
- ◆Simon of Cyrene, compelled to help carry the cross, is painted with the reluctant cooperation of a man pressed into service — his body helping while his expression protests.
- ◆The Flemish architectural background — more Northern European than first-century Jerusalem — places the Passion narrative in the visual world familiar to Jordaens's Antwerp contemporaries.



.jpg&width=600)



