
The lamentation
Jacob Jordaens·1650
Historical Context
This mid-century Lamentation over Christ reflects Jordaens' continued engagement with major religious subjects throughout his career. As the leading painter in Antwerp after Rubens' death in 1640, Jordaens received numerous commissions for large-scale religious works from churches across the Spanish 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 painting demonstrates Jordaens' powerful handling of the human figure in extremis, with strong chiaroscuro and warm flesh tones creating an emotionally compelling scene of grief and devotion.
Look Closer
- ◆The dead Christ is laid across the Virgin's lap in a pose that creates a diagonal of grief from upper right to lower left — the compositional spine of the Pietà type.
- ◆Jordaens painted Christ's wounds with clinical specificity — the lance wound in the side, the nail wounds in the feet, rendered without idealisation.
- ◆The Virgin's veil falls forward, partially obscuring her face — Jordaens depicting grief as a withdrawal from sight rather than a performed expression.
- ◆A Magdalene figure at the lower right holds Christ's feet in both hands — the physical contact extending beyond Pietà into devotional embrace.
- ◆Behind the central group, supporting figures press close — their compressed arrangement giving the scene the emotional density of a crowd's shared sorrow.



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