Rubens and the tulip fanatics
In the early 17th century, Antwerp was the place to be if you were loaded and looking to get loaded. Tulip bulbs were even traded in secret, for exorbitant amounts, near Rubens’s house. Sometimes, a rare tulip cost even more than a painting by Rubens. We do know that Peter Paul had lots of tulips in his garden. But was he also a tulip dealer?
iJohannes Bosschaert, Stilleven met tulpen, Nationalmuseum, Stockholm
Every day, garden curator Klara Alen investigates new Rubens stories about the garden, including this hidden titbit of history. Her research on the Antwerp tulip trade in Rubens’s time is currently ongoing.
Tulpans oorspronck aller vreughden (Tulips, the root of all happiness)
iCornelis Galle II naar Anthony van Dyck, De Heilige Dorothea, ca. 1638 - 1678, Collectie Stad Antwerpen, Museum Plantin-Moretus, publiek domein
Den grooten affslach onder de bloemen is gecomen (Flower prices have crashed)
iBaltasar van der Ast, Viceroy Merveilleuse Fondation Custodia, Collection Frits Lugt, Parijs
iNotarisbundel, Felixarchief, Antwerpen
iNotarisbundel, Felixarchief, Antwerpen
Bloemisten alhier hebben op Vrydagh een solemnele misse doen singhen in St. Joris kerck op dat de tulpen wel mochten voort comen (The florists here have paid for a solemn mass to be celebrated in St George’s Church for the tulips to flower)
iJan Brueghel I en Peter Paul Rubens, Allegorie van de geur (detail), ca. 1617 - 1618, Museo Nacional del Prado (Madrid)
(ick was) alleene woonende (...) deselve blommen niet en betrouwde in (m)ijnen hoff van vreese die daer uit genomen te mogen worden (I lived alone and didn’t dare to leave the flowers in my garden for fear that they might be stolen)
iPeter Paul Rubens en atelier, De wandeling in de tuin (Peter Paul Rubens, Helena Fourment en Nicolaas Rubens)(detail), ca. 1630-1631, Bayerische Staatsgemäldesammlungen, Alte Pinakothek, München, CC BY-SA 4.0