

Las Meninas, Velázquez
- Oil on linen canvas
- 100% hand-painted
- Reproduction painting
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| Author: | Diego Velázquez |
|---|---|
| Original Title: | Las meninas |
| Type: | Painting |
| Style: | Baroque |
| Medium | Oil |
| Support: | Canvas |
| Year: | 1656 |
| Genre: | Period scene |
| Located: | Prado National Museum, Madrid. |
The scene unfolds in one of the rooms of the Alcázar of Madrid, illuminated by a side light that guides the viewer’s gaze toward the background, where a mirror reflects the figures of the monarchs, Philip IV and Mariana of Austria. This detail, analyzed in depth by the painter and theorist Antonio Palomino, is one of the most enigmatic and revolutionary elements of the painting: the reflection of the royal couple places the viewer in the position of the model, blurring the boundary between reality and representation.
Here Velázquez transcends the limits of portraiture, composing a scene of almost mathematical structural precision. The perspective is constructed through lines converging at the open doorway in the background, creating a visual depth unprecedented in his time. The light, entering from the right, models the volumes with extreme subtlety, while the loose and vibrant brushwork, applied with apparent ease, anticipates techniques later used by the Impressionists. The gradations of gray, ocher, and silver tones enhance the courtly atmosphere, achieving a balance between rigor and naturalness that defines Velázquez’s genius.
Las Meninas, housed in the Museo del Prado, represents the culmination of the Sevillian painter’s technical mastery and his understanding of painting as an intellectual art. Its complex spatial architecture and masterful use of light make this work a visual manifesto on vision, illusion, and reality.
Las Meninas (1656) is the undisputed masterpiece of Velázquez and one of the most analyzed and admired compositions in the entire history of Western art. Painted during his tenure as court painter to Philip IV, this monumental work offers a complex reflection on representation, power, and perception. The central figure is the Infanta Margarita Teresa of Austria, surrounded by her ladies-in-waiting, known as “meninas,” along with jesters, a mastiff, and the artist himself, who includes his own self-portrait while working before the viewer.
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