Curator

  • Art Institute Chicago
  • Harvard art museum
  • My Exhibition
A work made of engraving on ivory paper.

Backgammon Players

c. 1630

Lucas Emil Vorsterman (Flemish, 1595-1675) after Adam de Coster (Flemish, c.1586-1643)

Flanders

Adam de Coster was a prominent painter of illuminated night scenes in Antwerp around 1630, about the same time that Lucas Emil Vorsterman was engraving works after his popular contemporaries in the same city. A student of Peter Paul Rubens, Vorsterman employed a style that was originally similar to that of the Flemish master, until a falling out with Rubens and subsequent trip to England provoked him to create stronger, more stylized, Caravaggesque engravings such as Backgammon Players. Clearly influenced by De Coster’s handling of light, Vorsterman brightened the otherwise dark scene with two candles whose flames illuminate the faces of those seated around the table.

Engraving on ivory paper

Prints and Drawings