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| Catalogue No. | 68 | |
| Artist |
Studio of JUSEPE DE RIBERA | |
| Period |
(?) 1591–1652 | |
| Title |
Jacob with the Flock of Laban | |
| Media/Size | Canvas, 72 in.x 93 1⁄ 2in. | |
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This is one of a number of repetitions of the dated picture of 1632 in the Escorial, of which a good example in the reverse direction is at Knowsley (cf Scharf, Catalogue of Pictures, 1875, No. 125). Background The scene does not appear to represent, as has sometimes been concluded, the specific incident of the placing of the peeled wands in the watering troughs (Genesis XXX), which is explicit in a variant of the composition known by an old copy in the Museo Cerralbo, Madrid. E de Gué Trapier (Ribera, 1952, pp. 84–5) suggests that the subject may symbolise Christ as the Good Shepherd. In view of Jacob’s association in other ways with the New Testament (eg, his escape from Esau to his uncle, Laban, is a prototype of the Flight into Egypt), this seems credible.The medieval note in the background of the picture, the small representation of Jacob asleep, was later used in a full-scale work by Ribera (Prado: the date is indistinct but is read by Trapier as 1639).The model for Laban was also used for the St Joseph in Ribera’s lost St Joseph as Carpenter,a copy of which is in the Prado (repd by Trapier, op cit, fig. 157). << Back to Page 6 Copyright © The Trustees of the Faringdon Collection 1999. All rights reserved. |
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