Dansende vrouw met bekkens
Pietro da Cortona, 1640
About this artwork
**Dansende vrouw met bekk (Dancing Woman with Cymbals)** Pietro da Cortona, 1640 Pen, h 462mm × w 195mm Step into the exuberant world of the Italian Baroque with this lively pen drawing by Pietro da Cortona, a master of the 17th century. Titled *Dansende vrouw met beens*—Dutch for "Dancing Woman Cymbals"—it a graceful female figure in mid-motion, her arms raised as if striking the rhythmic percussion. Created around 1640, during Cortona's peak as a leading painter and architect in Rome, this work exemplifies his flair for dynamic compositions that pulse with energy and theatricality. As a quintessential Baroque artist, Cortona was renowned for grand frescoes like those in the Barberini Palace, blending illusionistic space with vivid movement. Drawings like this one served as vital preparatory studies, honing poses and gestures for larger paintings or decorative schemes. The pen medium—likely ink on paper—allowed for swift, expressive lines that convey the swirl of fabric and the tension of dance, highlighting his mastery of figure drawing amid the era's emphasis on human emotion and spectacle. At 462mm tall and just 195mm wide, its vertical format draws the eye upward, mirroring the dancer's soaring vitality. This intimate sketch offers a glimpse into the creative process of a Baroque genius, inviting us to appreciate the artistry behind the grandeur.