Jacques Jordaens, Moses and his Ethiopian Wife
We don’t often see Moses like this. Jordaens portrays the prophet not as a leader or the messenger of the Tablets of Stone, but as a modern husband of a black woman. In so doing, the painter makes a powerful statement about equality.
Jacques Jordaens (1593-1678)
Moses and his Ethiopian Wife
C. 1650
Oil on canvas
Permanent custody, Collection of the Flemish Community (looted art)
On display at The Walters Art Museum (Baltimore, USA)
iJacques Jordaens, Moses and his Ethiopian wife, 1645-1650, Flemish Community Collection, in permanent storage at Rubenshuis, public domain
iJacques Jordaens, Moses and his Ethiopian wife (detail), 1645-1650, Flemish Community Collection, permanently housed at the Rubenshuis, public domain
iJacques Jordaens, Moses and his Ethiopian wife (detail), 1645-1650, Flemish Community Collection, permanently housed at the Rubenshuis, public domain
iJacques Jordaens, Moses and his Ethiopian wife (detail), 1645-1650, Flemish Community Collection, permanently housed at the Rubenshuis, public domain
iJacques Jordaens, Moses with Aaron and Miriam (preliminary study for Moses and his Ethiopian wife), c. 1650, City of Antwerp Collection, Rubenshuis, public domain