Collection: Baroque & Chiaroscuro

Baroque art, taking shape across Europe between roughly 1600 and 1750, broke from Renaissance equilibrium to pursue movement, theatricality, and a charged spiritual atmosphere. Counter Reformation Rome, the wealthy ports of the Dutch Republic, and the courts of Madrid, Antwerp, and Paris each gave the style a distinct accent, but a shared vocabulary held it together: dynamic diagonals, sculptural figures, and the dramatic use of light to direct the eye.

That handling of light, called chiaroscuro, defined the period. Caravaggio sharpened it into tenebrism, plunging biblical scenes into night so that a single shaft of illumination carried the entire composition's moral charge. His followers, the Caravaggisti, carried the device from Naples and Utrecht to Seville. Peter Paul Rubens answered with a Flemish version, all weight and warmth, where colour and torsion took the place of stark contrast.

In the Dutch Republic, the same century produced a quieter Baroque rooted in domestic interiors and civic portraiture. Rembrandt van Rijn made paint itself a vehicle for psychological depth, while Johannes Vermeer reduced the same impulse to rooms suspended in northern light. In Spain, court painting under Diego Velázquez achieved a parallel restraint, formal yet psychologically unguarded.

The works gathered here move across these centres, etchings and engravings that disseminated the great altarpieces and group portraits to European collectors. They sit naturally alongside the gallery's Renaissance holdings, from which their figural grammar descends, and the Rococo & Neoclassicism selection, which records what came next when courtly taste turned away from Baroque gravitas.