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FRANCISCO See also: Spanish painter, was See also: born at Fuente de Cantos in See also: Estremadura on the 7th of See also: November 1598
.
His See also: father was Luis See also: Zurbaran, a country labourer, his See also: mother See also: Isabel Marquet
.
In childhood he set about imitating See also: objects with See also: charcoal; and his father sent him, still See also: young, to the school of Juan de Roelas in Seville
.
Francisco soon became the best pupil in the studio of Roelas, surpassing the master himself; and before leaving him he had achieved a
solid reputation, full though Seville then was of able painters
.
He may have had here the opportunity of copying some of the paintings of Michelangelo da See also: Caravaggio; at any See also: rate he gained the name of " the Spanish Caravaggio," owing to the forcible realistic See also: style in which he excelled
.
He constantly painted See also: direct from nature, following but occasionally improving on his See also: model; and he made See also: great use of the See also: lay-figure in the study of draperies, in which he was peculiarly proficient
.
He had a See also: special gift for See also: white draperies; and, as a consequence, Carthusian houses are abundant in his paintings
.
To these rigid methods Zurbaran is said to have adhered throughout his career, which was prosperous, wholly confined to
See also: Spain, and varied by few incidents beyond those of his daily labour
.
His subjects were mostly of a severe and ascetic kind—religious vigils, the flesh chastised into subjection to the spirit—the compositions seldom thronged, and often reduced to a single figure
.
The style is more reserved and chastened than Caravaggio's, the See also: tone of colour often bluish to excess
.
Exceptional effects are attained by the precise finish of foregrounds, largely massed out in See also: light and shade
.
Zurbaran married in Seville Leonor de Jordera, by whom he had several See also: children
.
Towards 163o he was appointed painter to See also: Philip IV.; and there is a
See also: story that on one occasion the See also: sovereign laid his See also: hand on the artist's shoulder, saying, " Painter to the See also: king, king of painters." It was only
See also: late in See also: life that Zurbaran made a prolonged stay in See also: Madrid, Seville being the chief scene of his operations
.
He died, probably in 1662, in Madrid
.
In 1627 he painted the great altarpiece of St See also: Thomas Aquinas, now in the Seville museum; it was executed for the
See also: church of the
See also: college of that See also: saint there
.
This is Zurbaran's largest composition, containing figures of Christ and the Madonna, various sdints, See also: Charles V. with knights, and Archbishop Deza (founder of the college) with monks and servitors, all the
See also: principal personages being beyond the See also: size of life
.
It had been preceded by the numerous pictures of the screen of St See also: Peter Nolasco in the See also: cathedral
.
In the church of Guadalupe he painted various large pictures, eight of which relate to the See also: history of St See also: Jerome, and in the church of St See also: Paul, Seville, a famous figure of the Crucified Saviour, in See also: grisaille, presenting an illusive effect of marble
.
In 1633 he finished the paintings of the high altar of the See also: Carthusians in Jerez
.
In the palace of Buenretiro, Madrid, are four large canvases representing the Labours of Hercules, an unusual instance of non-Christian subjects from the hand of Zurbaran
.
A See also: fine specimen is in the See also: National Gallery, See also: London, a whole-length, life-sized figure of a kneeling Franciscan holding a See also: skull
.
It seems probable that another picture in the same gallery, the " Dead See also: Roland," which used to be ascribed to Velasquez, is really by Zurbaran
.
His principal scholars, whose style has as much See also: affinity to that of See also: Ribera as to Caravaggio's, were Bernabe de Ayala and the See also: brothers Polanco
.
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