BALEN, Hendrick van - b. 1575 Antwerpen, d. 1632 Antwerpen - WGA

BALEN, Hendrick van

(b. 1575 Antwerpen, d. 1632 Antwerpen)

Flemish painter and stained-glass designer, active mainly in his native Antwerp. His approximate date of birth can be deduced from a document dated 28 August 1618, in which he gives his age as 43. His father was a merchant of oil, candles and groceries; yet it seems likely that Hendrick’s formal education was good, as on his death he left a considerable number of books in different languages. He became a master in the Antwerp Guild of St Luke in 1592-93. Van Mander stated that Adam van Noort was van Balen’s teacher; the name of Marten de Vos has also been suggested. Between 1595 and 1600 van Balen travelled to Italy, presumably visiting Rome, Venice and other cities. Although there is no record of his travels, on his return to Antwerp he became a member of the Guild of the Romanists, so it is clear he had visited Rome. Once back in Antwerp, van Balen collaborated with Abel Grimmer on a View of Antwerp (1600; Koninklijk Museum voor Schone Kunsten, Antwerp), depicting God, Christ and the Virgin in clouds above Grimmer’s cityscape. From 1602 onwards van Balen’s name appears regularly in the records of the Antwerp Guild of St Luke, especially as a teacher.

He married in 1605, and three of his sons became painters: Jan van Balen (1611-1654), Gaspard van Balen (1615-1641) and Hendrik van Balen II (1623-1661). His daughter Maria married Theodoor van Thulden. Van Balen ran a successful studio for 30 years and had many pupils, including Anthony van Dyck in 1609 (the same year he was head dean of the Guild). In 1613 he travelled to the northern Netherlands with Rubens and Jan Brueghel the Elder; otherwise he remained in Antwerp.

At the outset of his career, van Balen executed a number of large altarpieces (e.g. the Resurrection, Antwerp, St Jacobskerk), and these reflect the Romanist influence of Adam van Noort. His later altarpieces, with richer and more subtle colouring, were evidently painted after van Dyck joined his studio. It is, however, for cabinet pictures, often of mythological subjects, that van Balen is best known, for example Diana Transforming Actaeon into a Stag (c. 1605, Szépművészeti Múzeum, Budapest). Other popular subjects were the Four Elements, the Banquet of the Gods and the Wedding of Peleus and Thetis. These scenes allowed the artist to display his attractive nudes in paradisaical settings.

Van Balen often collaborated with other artists on such works, most frequently with his friend Jan Brueghel the Elder, for whom he provided figures for landscapes and for fruit and flower garlands. Van Balen also worked with Joos de Momper, Lucas van Uden, Jan Wildens, Frans Snyders and, after the death of Jan Brueghel the Elder, Jan Brueghel the Younger.

Allegory of Abundance
Allegory of Abundance by

Allegory of Abundance

This panel is the result of the collaboration between Jan Brueghel the Elder and Hendrick van Balen. It belongs to the line of Flemish painting dedicated to the allegorical portrayal of the seasons and their riches. Van Balen, a master in the portrayal of divinities, depicts them here in all their splendour. The luxuriant, verdant background was painted by Brueghel.

Bacchus and Diana
Bacchus and Diana by

Bacchus and Diana

The painting depicts the Bacchanal with Bacchus and Diana. Bacchus is surrounded by satyrs and children. Diana is shown with nymphs and hunting dog and instruments of the hunt.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 7 minutes):

Camille Saint-Saëns: Samson et Delila, Act III, Scene 2, Bacchanal

Banquet of Achelous
Banquet of Achelous by

Banquet of Achelous

In his later work Van Balen seems to have had a preference for figures which are more prominent in the picture plane. In some cases, such as the Banquet of Achelous, some of the female figures are based on the example of Rubens’s classicist characters of the years around 1615.

Diana Resting after the Hunt
Diana Resting after the Hunt by

Diana Resting after the Hunt

Diana Resting after the Hunt
Diana Resting after the Hunt by

Diana Resting after the Hunt

Together with three nymphs, Diana, the Greek goddess of the hunt and of wild untamed nature has retired to a small island in the stream and attends to her toilet after the exertions of the hunt. Hendrick van Balen set this idyllic group of figures in a lush woodland landscape by Jan Brueghel the Elder. In addition to the landscape and the staffage figures, there is a further thematic group: the still-life in the foreground depicting the game which the hunters have just killed. This is thought to have been painted by Frans Snyders, who worked in van Balen’s studio and is considered a specialist in the painting of dead animals.

Diana Turns Actaeon into a Stag
Diana Turns Actaeon into a Stag by

Diana Turns Actaeon into a Stag

The story with Diana and Actaeon was a favourite with the late Mannerist painters. This is understandable, because the myth, particularly in Ovid’s playful, witty and lively presentation, contains both stimulatingly erotic and shivering horror story elements and thus was perfectly suited for the contemporary spirit. In Balen’s painting Diana’s figure is placed in the centre in a regal position. Over the head of the virgin goddess, Cupid is holding a crown of flowers. The action is developed in depth and the light falling on the women bathing in the clearing in the background indicates that the scene is located in a shadowy wood. The artist painted his figures according to Italian models.

Feast of the Gods
Feast of the Gods by

Feast of the Gods

This small painting was created by a collaboration between Hendrick van Balen and Jan Brueghel the Elder. The former painted the figures, the latter the landscape and the still-life elements. The painting may represent the wedding banquet of Peleus and Thetis, the parents of the Greek hero Achilles, which was attended by the gods of Olympus.

Van Balen painted this subject on a number of occasions, some in collaboration with Jan Brueghel the Elder.

Herse and her Sisters with Mercury
Herse and her Sisters with Mercury by

Herse and her Sisters with Mercury

Ovid (Met. 2:708-832) tells how three sisters, returning from the festival of Minerva and carrying her sacred baskets on their heads, were espied by Mercury who immediately fell in love with the most beautiful of them, Herse. Another of the sisters, Aglauros, was consumed with envy, and tried to prevent Mercury entering Herse’s chamber when he came to her one night. He touched Aglauros with his wand and she turned to black stone, the colour of her thoughts.

The present playful and sensuous representation of the story is similar both in style and theme to a number of others executed by van Balen and his circle. Van Balen was specialised in small cabinet pictures which often depicted mythological scenes.

Holy Trinity
Holy Trinity by

Holy Trinity

Hendrick van Balen - particularly after about 1615 - had some significance as a painter of altarpieces of a monumental size. In these works the preference for colourful detail so characteristic of the cabinet painter is conspicuous. In the Holy Trinity the characters look monumental, unmistakably influenced by Rubens’s style.

Minerva and the Nine Muses
Minerva and the Nine Muses by

Minerva and the Nine Muses

Ovid describes (Met. 5:250-268) how Minerva visited the Muses on Mt helicon, their home, to listen to their song and story and to see the sacred spring, the Hippocrene, which flowed from a rock after it had been struck by the hoof of the winged horse, Pegasus. The scene is a wooded mountain-side where the company of Muses are playing their instruments. Minerva is just arriving. Pegasus is seen in the background leaping from a high rock from which water gushes. The association of Minerva and the Muses was in line with the tradition that made her patroness of the arts.

Odysseus as a Guest of the Nymph Calypso
Odysseus as a Guest of the Nymph Calypso by

Odysseus as a Guest of the Nymph Calypso

In this mythological scene the arrangement of beast and bird depicts the Four Elements, according to the tradition of Flemish cabinet painting. The painting is a result of collaboration of three painters: Hendrick van Balen painted the figures, all the animals were painted by Jan Brueghel the Elder, and Joos de Momper produced the wild and rugged mountain landscape.

The Feast of Achelous
The Feast of Achelous by

The Feast of Achelous

This painting is a collaborative work of Hendrick van Balen and Jan Brueghel the Younger.

The Judgment of Paris
The Judgment of Paris by

The Judgment of Paris

The Judgment of Paris (the son of a Trojan king, Priam) is the most popular of all mythological themes in art. The scene depicts the story of his award of the golden apple to Venus in a contest of beauty between her, Juno, and Minerva.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 3 minutes):

Cristoph Willibald Gluck: Paride ed Elena, Paris’ aria

The Wedding of Thétis and Peleus
The Wedding of Thétis and Peleus by

The Wedding of Thétis and Peleus

The subject is taken from Homer’s Iliad. Zeus was in love with Thetis, a sea nymph, but received a prophecy that Thetis’s son would become greater than his father, just like Zeus had dethroned his father to lead the succeeding pantheon of gods. In order to avoid such an outcome Zeus arranged for her to marry a human, Peleus. Peleus was very much in favour of such an arrangement, however, Thetis refused him.

Proteus, an early sea-god, advised Peleus to find the sea nymph when she was asleep and bind her tightly to keep her from changing forms to escape. He did so, but she managed to shift shapes, becoming flame, water, a raging lioness, and a serpent. Peleus held fast and eventually the nymph was subdued and consented to marry him.

Virgin and Child with the Infant St John, Surrounded by Animals
Virgin and Child with the Infant St John, Surrounded by Animals by

Virgin and Child with the Infant St John, Surrounded by Animals

This panel is the result of a collaboration between Hendrick van Balen and Jan Brueghel the Younger. Like in other collaborative works, the figures were painted by van Balen.

Wings of an Altarpiece
Wings of an Altarpiece by

Wings of an Altarpiece

Hendrik van Balen was an Antwerp artist and the teacher of Anthony van Dyck. He mainly painted religious and mythological scenes. He specialized in human figures and was often asked to add staffage to landscapes painted by his colleagues.

The two panels, Virgin and Child with Angels and John the Baptist rebuking King Herod, served originally as the shutters of a triptych. The centre panel, St John Preaching to the Multitude, is no longer in the cathedral.

The left wing shows angels preparing Jesus’ bath. One of them is about to take the Infant from his mother’s arms, while another carries a basin and a third angel a pair of towels. Other little angels look down from a cloudy sky. The charming scene prefigures the Baptism of Christ by John the Baptist. By using such a familiar scene from everyday life, the artist was able to intensify the spiritual appeal to the ordinary viewer.

The scene in the right wing is much more dramatic. Inside a classical palace, John the Baptist rebukes Herod Antipas, the King of Palestine, for his adulterous marriage to Herodias, who witnesses the confrontation with a lady-in-waiting. The preacher duly paid for his accusations with his life.

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