Ruthart has been called one of the most intriguing artistic personalities of seventeenth-century Europe. He was born and trained in Danzig (now Gdansk), before visiting Rome in 1659. From 1663 to 1664 he was in Antwerp, registered in the painter’s guild as “Carlo Routtart,” where he studied Flemish animal painting, especially the work of Jan Fyt and Frans Snyders.
Ruthart specialized in the depiction of animals—in particular, wild animals—at rest, in conflict, fighting, and being hunted. His grander compositions incorporated them into the surrounding scenery, as well as depicting them in idyllic settings, mythological episodes, and biblical contexts. Ruthart had a superb understanding of animal anatomy and was adept at depicting animals in motion and at rendering fur with astonishing fidelity. In the present work, the artist created thin lines of texture in the fur by carefully pulling away wet paint either with a single dry bristle or with the handle of his brush. Ruthart’s work is also characterized by the restrained, cool colors visible here: silver-grey and brown for rocks, blue-green for vegetation, and vivid colors for the animals themselves.
In the 1660s Ruthart travelled through Regensburg to Vienna, where he worked for Prince Charles Eusebius of Liechtenstein. In 1672 he was in Venice and Rome, where he saw the work of Giovanni Battista Castiglione. That year he entered the Celestine monastery in Rome and painted altarpieces for the monastery church of S Eusebio. He later moved to the Abbey of S. Maria di Collemaggio in L’Aquila, where he was known as “Pater Andrea” and where he remained until his death.
Paintings by Ruthart are to be found in princely collections and museums across Europe, but the largest holding of the artist’s work remains in L’Aquila, exhibited in the Sala Carlo Ruther of the Museo Nazionale d’Abruzzo. A group of Ruthart’s oil studies of animals from life were retained by the artist and utilized by him throughout his career as references for his larger compositions. Nine superb examples passed to the collection of the Marchesi Strozzi in Florence and were dispersed at auction in 1993. The present study of a wolf is one of these. It was used by Ruthart in several compositions, including The Fable of the Fox and the Sick Lion in the Galleria Nazionale, Rome; Ulysses and Circe of 1666 formerly in the Dresden Gemäldegalerie, and in the lower left of the signed Wild Animals in a Mountain Gorge in the Nationalmuseum, Stockholm (Fig. 1).