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Image

Anthony van Dyck

Study for Malchus, ca. 1618-1620

Description

Maker

  • Anthony van Dyck, 1599-1641, Flemish

Title

Study for Malchus

Year

ca. 1618-1620

Medium

Black chalk on laid paper

Materials/Techniques

Materials

  • black chalk

Supports

  • laid paper

Dimensions

24.5 x 37.2 cm (9 5/8 x 14 5/8 inches)

Signature / Inscription / Marks

Inscribed in pen and ink LR: "Ant. Vandijck"

Type

  • Works on Paper,
  • Drawings and Watercolors

Credit

Gift of Mrs. Gustav Radeke

Object Number

20.443

Projects & Publications

Publications

Old Master Drawings from the Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design

Exhibition History

Exhibition History

Drawing Closer

March 12 - September 4, 2022

This drawing is a study for a figure in Anthony van Dyck’s large painting The Taking of Christ. The servant Malchus is depicted in a moment of struggle, just before the apostle Peter cuts off his ear with a sword. Van Dyck confidently outlined the contours of the dramatically foreshortened figure with fluid, unbroken marks. For the shading, he used tightly packed and regular parallel hatching, which he softly blended in the lighter areas. Spare in its use of materials, the study achieves a remarkable effect of movement.

From Dürer to Van Gogh

June 5 - October 26, 2008

This drawing is a compositional study for a painting depicting the betrayal of Christ that the artist presented to his teacher, Peter Paul Rubens. The subject of the sketch is Malchus, servant to the high priest of Jerusalem. According to the Gospel of John, Peter severed Malchus’s ear with a sword during Christ’s capture in the Garden of Gethsemane. Van Dyck depicted Malchus’s struggle with Peter, whose hand is visible at left grasping Malchus’s clothing. Van Dyck’s strong direction of line, most obvious beneath the figure, reinforces Malchus’s violent gesture.

Design and Description

January 27 - April 9, 2006

Van Dyck created this sketch for the figure of Malchus in his painting Betrayal of Christ, now in the Prado Museum, Madrid, and reproduced below. Malchus was the servant of the high priest of Jerusalem. According to the Gospel of Luke, Peter severed Malchus’s ear with a sword during Christ’s capture in the Garden of Gethsemane.

Van Dyck depicted Malchus struggling with Peter, whose hand is visible grasping Malchus’s clothing at left. Van Dyck’s strong direction of line, most obvious underneath the figure, reinforces Malchus’s violent gesture.

Drawing the Line

March 30 - June 10, 2001

This drawing is a preparatory study for Anthony van Dyck's painting Betrayal of Christ, now in the Prado Museum, Madrid. It shows Malchus, a priestly attendant, attempting to avoid an assault by the apostle Peter, who will soon slice off Malchus's ear. Much of the point of the drawing is to generate a sense of lateral thrust away from Peter's hand, which grips Malchus's tunic at the left of the image. To achieve this aim, van Dyck aligns various parts of Malchus's body on a diagonal axis and rhymes them with broad, insistently diagonal, shading strokes. In counterpoint, short, stubby marks interpret the outstretched hand as a point of splayed stoppage. A careful look at the contours reveals that they are not made with a continuous line, but with many short concave strokes that give volume to the figure.

Treasures on Paper

June 13 - August 19, 1989

Old Master Drawings

September 2 - October 16, 1983

Master Drawing from the Museum and a Private Collection

June 19 - October 27, 1946

Use

The images on this website can enable discovery and collaboration and support new scholarship, and we encourage their use. This object is in the public domain (CC0 1.0). This object is Study for Malchus with the accession number of 20.443. To request high-resolution files or new photography, please send an email to imagerequest@risd.edu and include your name and the object's accession number.

Feedback

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