Rubens’s nine paintings in the
ceiling of the Banqueting Hall, in Whitehall, London, provided the main
decoration of this magnificent room, which was the focal point of
Stuart Court ceremonial. Commissioned by King James I and his son, the
future Charles I, following the destruction of the early Jacobean
Banqueting Hall, their role in enhancing court spectacle came to an end
with the fire that destroyed the rest of Whitehall Palace in 1598. The
delay in executing the commission was due to matters of state, in which
Rubens was involved as a diplomat. His stay in London in this capacity
in 1629/30 made possible the realization of this commission. Rubens
would have been aware that the Stuarts owed their position to the regal
union of the crowns of England and Scotland, that his royal patron had
now embraced his father’s pacific policy and that he was the more
determined to impose an absolute rule, which his father had eloquently
expounded in speeches ad treatises. These three themes form the central
core of the cycle which glorified the reign of the late king, James I.
The cycle presented Rubens with a great challenge, not only because of
the novelty of the subject matter, but also because of the formal
problems presented by the huge scale of the work. This volume of the
Corpus Rubenianum Ludwig Burchard provides the fullest review to date
of the history of the commission, it also unravels the complex
preparatory work and places the subject matter in the context of early
Stuart political and ethical aspirations.
“Gregory Martin’s two volumes on Rubens’s
paintings for the Whitehall Ceiling is the most exhaustive and
up-to-date study of this major work, and, apart from possible
interpretive refinements, is unlikely to be superseded.”
(Christopher White, in: HNA Newsletter, Vol. 23, No. 2,
Nov. 2006)
"Gregory Martin has written a work of exemplary scholarship.
(...) The book benefits greatly from Martin's experience and
maturity as a scholar who has spent his life thinking about
Rubens." (D. Howarth in: Times Literary Supplement, 14
November 2008, p. 34)