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4.15: The Three Graces (Les Trois Grâces)

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    362227
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    The Three Graces (Les Trois Grâces)

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    Artist: Peter Paul Rubens
    Medium: oil on panel
    Art Historical Time Period: Baroque (c. 1630–35)

    Rubens painted The Three Graces for a cultured audience that valued mythological themes and admired the theatricality of the Baroque style. In this period, art was closely tied to courtly culture, and paintings were expected to inspire wonder, sensual pleasure, and admiration for wealth and refinement. By choosing to portray the three goddesses of joy and beauty with soft, rounded bodies, Rubens both honored classical tradition and redefined it. His figures clearly illustrates the Classical ideal, yet they also present a new model of feminine beauty grounded in fertility and abundance.

    The painting was innovative because it departed from the ancient sculptural model of the Aphrodite of Knidos, which emphasized slender, statuesque proportions. Rubens instead celebrated “Rubenesque” bodies—full, curving, and dynamic. His brushwork conveys movement and warmth. The composition highlights a natural intimacy between the women. Rubens broadened the standard of beauty, showing that idealized forms don’t need to be thin. This challenged viewers to see beauty as more varied and human, rather than limited to narrow classical norms.

    The impact of The Three Graces has been long-lasting. Rubens’ celebration of voluptuous figures helped legitimize fuller body types as worthy of admiration, shaping taste in the Baroque and Rococo periods and beyond. Even today, his influence surfaces in conversations about body image and the celebration of diverse forms of beauty. By merging classical myth with Baroque naturalism, Rubens not only created a masterpiece of his age but also expanded the visual language of beauty in ways that still resonate in modern culture.

    Vocabulary

    • Baroque – a dramatic and ornate European art style of the 1600s
    • mythological – related to traditional stories of gods and heroes

    • Rubenesque – a term describing fuller, rounded female bodies in art.

    Student Authors

    • Ana Acero ’27 and Darius Hunter-Henley ‘27

    References and Image Attribution

    • Sutton, Peter C., Wieseman, Marjorie E., and Van Hout, Nico. Drawn By The Brush: Oil Sketches By Peter Paul Rubens. Yale University Press, 2004.
    • Van Hout, Nico. “Rubens’s Oil Sketches: A Study of the Three Graces.” The Burlington Magazine, vol. 145, no. 1203, 2003.
    • Image: “ Statue of Coatlicue displayed in National Anthropology Museum in Mexico City” via Wikimedia Commons by Luidger licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported. Modified from original.

     

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    4.15: The Three Graces (Les Trois Grâces) is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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