Adriaen de Vries (1626) was a Northern Mannerist sculptor born in the Netherlands but working in Central Europe, whose international style crossed the threshold to the Baroque; he excelled in refined modelling and bronze casting and in the manipulation of patina and became the most famous European sculptor of his generation. He also excelled in draughtsmanship.
Partly as a result of the disturbances of the Thirty Years' War, and also changes in style, Adriaen de Vries had no direct follower.
Life
Born in The Hague to a patrician family, his early training is obscure; a recent suggestion suggests an apprenticeship with Willem Danielsz. van Tetrode, known in Italy as Guglielmo Fiammingo, a pupil of Benvenuto Cellini who had returned to the Netherlands. Another possibility is that he was apprenticed to a goldsmith, his brother-in-law Simon Adriaensz Rottermont. Both possibilities are suggestive in view of de Vries' virtuoso casting technique and refined finish.
Apprenticeship in Italy
He travelled to Florence, where, as early as 1581, he is documented working in the studio of the master Mannerist sculptor Giambologna, a Northerner like himself, and the greatest influence on his mature work. Three of the Virtues and some of the putti for Giambologna's Grimaldi Chapel, in San Francesco di Castelletto, Genoa (1579), have been attributed to Adriaen de Vries. In 1586, he was called to Milan to assist Pompeo, the son of the ailing Leone Leoni, whom he succeeded as master of one of Italy's largest bronze-casting studios; for Leoni de Vries provided three heroically scaled saints for Leoni's high altar at the basilica of San Lorenzo at the Escorial.
Commissions in Savoy and Germany
This led to his brief appointment as court sculptor to Philip II's son-in-law Charles Emmanuel I, Duke of Savoy in Turin. In 1589-94 he worked for the first time in Prague, making busts and reliefs for Emperor Rudolf II. These sculptures are now housed in Vienna and at the Victoria and Albert Museum, which possesses a bust of Rudolf in bas-relief. He left Prague in 1594 for a visit to study in Rome. On his return through Germany, he executed two fountains in 1596 for the city of Augsburg, the Mercury and Hercules and the Hydra fountains, which may still be seen in Maximilianstraße.
Return to Bohemia (after 1601)
De Vries returned in 1601 to Prague, where Rudolf made him Kammerbildhauer ("chamber sculptor", i.e., privileged artist). During his hypothetical stay in Rome in 1604, he had cast a statue of Christ at the column, a centrepiece for Adam von Hannewaldt's tomb monument in the Holy Trinity Church in Rothsürben (Żórawina), today in the National Museum in Warsaw. Fourteen sculptures, the largest collection of De Vries' work, are in Museum De Vries at Drottningholm Palace, opened in 2001. Their presence in Sweden is the result of the Sack of Prague in the last days of the Thirty Years' War, when the Swedes pillaged what remained of Rudolf's huge collections, and took a great many statues, in particular duke Albrecht von Wallenstein's garden statues, that used to adorn his palace on the Lesser Town (city quarter) of Prague. The originals, now to be found in Museum de Vries, are represented by bronze replicas at the Wallenstein Palace in Prague, now seat of the Czech senate. Another famous work by de Vries, also now at Drottningholm, was the Neptunus Fountain, made for Frederiksborg Palace in Denmark. These sculptures were also taken as prizes of war, during the Dano-Swedish War (1658–1660).
Gallery
<gallery>
file:Drottningholm - KMB - 16000300021321.jpg|Hercules fountain, gardens of Drottningholm Palace
file:Drottningholm - KMB - 16000300021356.jpg|Wrestlers, in garden at Drottningholm Palace
File:Apollo MET DP215247.jpg|Apollo, c. 1594, Metropolitan Museum of Art
File:Mercure Psyché.jpg|Mercury and Psyche, 1593, Musée du Louvre
File:Austria-03289 - Emperor Rudolph II (32120918753).jpg|Bust of Emperor Rudolf II, 1607, Imperial Treasury, Vienna
File:Adriaen de Vries, Empire Triumphant over Avarice, 1610, NGA 1287.jpg|Empire Triumphant over Avarice, 1610, National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C.
File:Fürstenmausoleum Stadthagen 01 Auferstehungsmonument 1.JPG|Resurrection monument (a cenotaph) in the Prince Ernst of Schaumburg's mausoleum, 1613–1620
File:Adrian de Vries Laokoon.jpg|De Vries' reinterpretation of the Laocoön theme (1623), bronze replica in the Wallenstein Palace gardens, Prague
</gallery>
Notes
Further reading
- Scholten, Frits. Adriaen de Vries 1556-1626: Imperial Sculptor (Zwolle: Waanders) 1999.
External links
- Adriaen de Vries at the ArtCyclopedia
