VOS, Simon de - b. 1603 Antwerpen, d. 1676 Antwerpen - WGA

VOS, Simon de

(b. 1603 Antwerpen, d. 1676 Antwerpen)

Flemish painter. In 1615 he became a pupil of Cornelis de Vos (no relation), with whom Jan Cossiers may have been a fellow-apprentice. By 1620 de Vos was a master in the Antwerp Guild of St Luke. For the next eight years he may either have worked in Rubens’s studio or have travelled abroad . The latter is more likely in view of the similarities between de Vos’s oeuvre and that of Johann Liss, who was in Rome and Venice at that time. This hypothesis is supported by the italianizing characteristics evident in de Vos’s early work.

Allegorical Scene
Allegorical Scene by

Allegorical Scene

The subject of the scene is an illustration of the popular adage “Sine Baccho et Cerere friget Venus” (Without Ceres and Bacchus, Venus would Freeze): without food (Ceres, the Roman god of agriculture) and wine (Bacchus), love (Venus) is left cold.

Allegorical Scene (detail)
Allegorical Scene (detail) by

Allegorical Scene (detail)

Allegory of the Five Senses
Allegory of the Five Senses by

Allegory of the Five Senses

In this allegory the five senses are represented as a merry company. Hearing is embodied by the playing musicians, Taste by the flagons of wine, Sight by the lovers gazing into each other’s eyes, Smell by the dog or pipe smoke, and Touch by both the central girl’s contact with the musical instrument and the contact between the lovers to her left. The pyramidal, Mannerist composition, the rich colours and elegant twisting figures are all motifs typical of De Vos’ work. The influence of Johann Liss, whom the artist probably met first in either Venice or Rome in the 1620s, is apparent.

Christ on the Cross
Christ on the Cross by

Christ on the Cross

This painting was executed with the contribution of the workshop.

Merry Company
Merry Company by

Merry Company

Between 1628 and 1640 Simon de Vos painted a number of festive scenes with men and women singing and playing musical instruments and ranged round richly set banquets. Until about 1640 he must have gained some reputation in Antwerp with this kind of work. These company pictures bring to mind the contemporary pictures by Dutch painters.

The Beheading of St Paul
The Beheading of St Paul by

The Beheading of St Paul

After about 1645 Simon de Vos’s style underwent an important change, partly influenced by Van Dyck’s emotionally charged idiom, which was becoming increasingly popular. De Vos did no more genre scenes after this time, but only painted cabinet-sized history pictures such as the Beheading of St Paul.

The Israelites after Crossing the Red Sea
The Israelites after Crossing the Red Sea by

The Israelites after Crossing the Red Sea

The Raising of Lazarus
The Raising of Lazarus by

The Raising of Lazarus

After the middle of the seventeenth century Baroque was the determining style for small-scale work made by painters in Antwerp, such as Simon de Vos, Pieter van Lint, Willem van Herp the Elder, and others.

The style of Simon de Vos before 1640 is marked by a notable plasticity and a preference for bright light effects. His history paintings are crowded with restlessly moving characters, the Raising of Lazarus is a characteristic example.

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