Tomás Yepes
Yepes' depictions of flower vases, fruits (particularly grapes), and everyday objects were prominent in the region during the 17th and 18th century, and he has been regarded as one of the major rediscoveries of art history. He is best known for his distinctive style of flower painting that he focused on throughout his career. His paintings are exhibited in museums and in private collections worldwide, with Museo del Prado hosting the most extensive collection of his works.
Life
Yepes was born to Pascual Tomás Yepes and Vicenta Pujades or Puchades in 1595 or 1600. Although art historians have been unable to ascertain whether he was born in the city of Valencia—where he was active during his career—he is considered to have been born in the Kingdom of Valencia.
Not much is known about Yepes' life outside of his paintings. He enrolled at the Colegio de Pintores de Valencia (College of Painters of Valencia) in October 1616. By 1630, he was in a commercial deal with Medina del Campo and his paintings were sold at the town's various fairs. Yepes had an elder sister, Vicenta, who owned a confectionery. In 1631, she filed a lawsuit against Yepes demanding payment of old debts, which her brother settled with delivery of a few religious paintings.
Yepes was married to Ana Eres or Heres, a scion of a wealthy Valencian family; her family also owned properties that were rented out in Algemesí. After the death of her brothers, Eres declared herself to be the sole heiress of the family on 4 July 1635. Yepes' father-in-law Gaspar Eres worked as a carpenter at the fairs; Yepes and Gaspar Eres collectively received 220 Valencian pounds from Medina del Campo in 1635.
Yepes also did paintings for clients. In 1632, he sold some of his fruit paintings for eight Valencian pounds to his notary Vicente Cortés. On 4 December 1633, he signed a deal worth 13 pounds and 10 wages with the merchant Juan Ruiz for a supply of fabric and cloth to be used for his paintings. On 2 August 1638, Simón Colomer received eight canvases from Yepes, fulfilling an order Colomer had placed in 1637.
William B. Jordan points to gaps in the timeline and life of Yepes; although he was active by the second decade of the 17th century, most of the works attributed to him come after 1642. In 1655, his paintings were displayed in the Convent of Santo Domingo during the second centenary of the canonization of Saint Vincent Ferrer. Yepes mainly chose to paint flower vases and fruits, for which he was known across the kingdom.
Like Francisco Pérez Sierra, Yepes grew different varieties of flowers in his backyard to use for his paintings. He continued to paint through the 1660s, and his signed works have been found dated up to the year of his death. Yepes died in Valencia on 16 June 1674, and was buried at St. Stephen's Church.
Themes
Yepes specialised in painting bodegón and still lifes. His application of chiaroscuro and tenebrism, and compositional approach of contrast, detail and deep colour belong to the Spanish Baroque style of painting. He explored themes of naturalism in his bodegones and still lifes, albeit with motifs that represented prosperities of life in Valencia. This was in contrast to the works of contemporary Spanish Baroque painters which were defined by their austerity, and his paintings have been characterized as antiquated in context of the Spanish Golden Age.
Yepes is primarily noted for depicting flowers, fruits, and everyday objects on tables and against landscapes, and a lot of his paintings shared distinctive elements: flowers in ornate vases or ceramic pots, fruits in glossy or porcelain bowls (sometimes with landscapes drawn on them), and plain or decorative tablecloths (sometimes with lace). His works exhibit symmetrical designs without much disruption in patterns, with dim lighting and a varied range of colours. While his early works focused on attention to detail, he developed a smoother and free composition later in his life.
Yepes focused on painting flowers throughout his life, individually and as components of different types of paintings. His depictions of flower vases and pots are regarded to be distinctive in their style and incomparable to other bodegón painters of the time. In Vase with Quadriga Profile View (1643), he painted 26 species of flowers against a dark background, with a neutral vase and tablecloth to emphasize the colour and contrast of flowers. In Vase with Chariot seen from the Front (1643), he painted flowers in a vase separated from each other to focus on individual flowers and their symmetry, instead of producing a cumulative effect.
Yepes studied the works of Juan van der Hamen and some of his early paintings were similar to Hamen's style. Both employed symmetry of compositions, dark lighting, and highlighted the quality of objects by underlining their contours and applying multiple glazes. His paintings of sweets and desserts, such as Sweets and Nuts on a Table and Still Life with Sweets and Dried Fruit (1650), draw parallels to Hamen's works with themes of chiaroscuro, lateral illumination, and symmetry. His later works diverged from Hamen's style in that he introduced more variety of motifs, such as Manises ceramics in flower pots, Delft porcelain vases, rich branchy rugs, and landscapes.
Yepes was notable for his depictions of grapes, which he painted in three specific ways: individually with a focus on grapes; Still Life of Grapes (1649), as a part of a bodegón scene; Still Life with Grapes (1655), and complementary to a bigger scene or different theme Landscape with a Vine (1645). His grape paintings shared themes with those of de Espinosa, Juan Fernández el Labrador, Francisco de Zurbarán, and Pedro de Camprobín. Marcos Antonio Orellana praised his grape depictions and said of one that "a basket full of grapes, whose diaphanous and transparent grains, with their branches, could deceive the birds, like those other highly celebrated Zeuxis grapes."