Use of Cookies

The Royal Collections Gallery uses its own and third-party cookies, mainly for technical purposes, which are necessary to provide our services and provide you with relevant content. More information in our cookies policy. Cookies Policy.

ACCEPT to confirm that you have read the information and accepted their installation. You can change your browser settings.

Retrato de Isabel de Borbón, reina de España

Taller de Rubens, Pedro Pablo
Hacia 1632

Este retrato de medio cuerpo de Isabel de Borbón, la primera mujer de Felipe IV, junto al del rey, repite de forma muy exacta el modelo creado por Rubens durante su segunda estancia en España, entre 1628 y 1629, por encargo de su tía Isabel Clara Eugenia de Austria, gobernadora de los Países Bajos. La infanta española deseaba tener en su corte de Bruselas los retratos más actuales de su sobrino Felipe IV y de los miembros de su familia, según se extrae de la correspondencia de Rubens con su amigo Peiresc de 2 de diciembre de 1628 y de las explicaciones dadas por Francisco Pacheco sobre el artista en el «Arte de la pintura» (1649).

De las distintas réplicas pintadas y grabadas surgidas de los originales de Rubens, se pueden extraer dos prototipos bien diferenciados de acuerdo con su atuendo. Los correspondientes a Isabel de Borbón presentan menos variaciones que los del Felipe IV, ya que lucen siempre idéntica gola valona, tocado, pendientes y collar de perlas, del que cuelgan las joyas más emblemáticas que llevaban las reinas de España: el diamante del «Estanque» con la perla «Peregrina» pinjante, cuya mayor o menor presencia depende del tamaño del formato. Únicamente existen algunos cambios en la ornamentación del traje, con idea de hacer juego con el retrato del rey. En este ejemplar, la reina figura con un rico vestido bordado con perlas y con el conjunto de tocado y joyas al completo, desapareciendo el pañuelo y el abanico que apoya sobre una mesa, elementos accesorios que presenta la otra modalidad. Las estampas de ambos reyes, ejecutadas por Jacob Louys y Pieter Soutman, los representan en esta última modalidad de busto prolongado con idéntico traje brocado en oro.

Gracias al reciente descubrimiento de un documento del Archivo General de Palacio Real de Madrid, hasta ahora inédito, se ha podido saber que estos dos retratos pasaron a la colección real española gracias a su adquisición por parte de Alfonso XII en 1881, procedentes de la testamentaría de Valentín Carderera.

General Classification

Pintura retratística; Pintura de caballete

Type of Object

Cuadro

By

Taller de Rubens, Pedro Pablo

Title

Retrato de Isabel de Borbón, reina de España

Era / Cultural Context

Reinado de Felipe IV; Barroco flamenco; Escuela flamenca

Place of Production

Bélgica

Date

Hacia 1632

Subject

Madera

Display

Lienzo

Technical

Pintura al óleo

Dimensions

Fondo enmarcado: (Altura: 89,5 centímetros; Anchura: 69 centímetros)

Inventory

10055852

Credits

Texto: Carmen García-Frías Checa

Discover it at the Planta -1

Authors and Collectors

Rubens, Peter Paul
The Author

Rubens, Peter Paul

(Siegen (Germany), 1577 - Antwerp (Netherlands), 1640)

Peter Paul Rubens (Siegen, Holy Roman Empire, present-day Germany, 28th June 1577 - Antwerp, Duchy of Brabant, Habsburg Netherlands, present-day Belgium, 30th May 1640), also known as Peter Paul Rubens, Pieter Paul, Pieter Pauwel or Petrus Paulus, was a Flemish Baroque painter. His exuberant style emphasised dynamism, colour and sensuality. His main influences were Ancient Greek and Roman art and the Italian Renaissance painters, especially Leonardo da Vinci; Michelangelo, whose depiction of anatomy he admired; and above all Titian, whom he considered his master and of whom he stated that "with him, painting has found its essence".

He painted a wide variety of subjects: religious and historical scenes, classical mythology, hunting scenes, landscapes, portraits, as well as drawings, illustrations for...

Read more
Philip IV
Monarch

Philip IV

(Valladolid, 1605 - Madrid, 1665)

The third son of Philip III (1578-1621) and Margaret of Austria (1584-1611), the future Philip IV was born in Valladolid, the capital of the Hispanic Monarchy between 1601 and 1606. Sworn heir to the Crown on 30th January 1608, in the Church of San Jerónimo El Real in Madrid, he was educated by Galcerán Albanell, a Catalan nobleman of renowned erudition. Prince Philip, as he was then, received classes in History, Geography, Mathematics and military tactics. After ascending the throne in 1621, he furthered his education by expanding his reading and learned languages such as Italian and French. 


Philip IV was married twice. His first wife was Elisabeth of France (1602-1644) whom he married on 18th October 1615 and...

Read more
Elisabeth of France
Monarch

Elisabeth of France

(Fontainebleau (Francia), 1602 - Madrid, 1644)

The second of six children born to King Henry IV of France and III of Navarre (1553-1610) and Marie de' Medici (1575-1642), Elisabeth of France was reared at the refined court of her mother, who inculcated in her a deep artistic and cultural sensitivity. Her marriage to Prince Philip, the future Philip IV (1605-1665), was part of a new diplomatic rapprochement between France and the Hispanic Monarchy that also included the marriage between the Infanta Anne of Austria (1601-1666), daughter of Philip III (1578-1621), and the French King Louis XIII (1601-1643), Isabella's brother. The double wedding was celebrated on 18th October 1615, and the exchange of the two Princesses on the...

Read more

The work in context

View in Timeline