Cristóbal de Villalpando (born c. 1645, Mexico City, Viceroyalty of New Spain [now in Mexico]—died Aug. 20, 1714, Mexico City) was a Mexican painter known for his decorative and luminous Baroque style.
Villalpando came of age as a painter during the era of Baroque exuberance in Mexican art, particularly in its Churrigueresque architecture. Rather than pursue the severe tenebrist Baroque of Spanish painters such as Francisco de Zurbarán and the Mexico-based Sebastián López de Arteaga, Villalpando produced luminous images that were a two-dimensional equivalent to the Ultrabaroque architecture of buildings like the church of Santa Prisca in Taxco.
Villalpando’s use of colour and the golden light that fills his paintings owe much to the work of the painter Baltasar Echave Rioja, the godfather of one of his sons and possibly his teacher. The work of Peter Paul Rubens was also an important source. Like other Mexican painters, such as Echave Rioja and Juan Correa, Villalpando shared Rubens’s loose brushwork, rich colouring, and dynamic compositions. He occasionally used Rubens’s paintings, which he may have seen reproduced in engravings and painted copies, as compositional models. Villalpando’s Triumph of the Eucharist, for example, is based on Rubens’s Triumph of the Eucharist. Villalpando made this painting for the sacristy of the Cathedral of Mexico, for which he produced other works, including The Virgin of the Apocalypse and An Allegory of the Church, all made between 1684 and 1685. For these dramatic images, he places dynamic compositions in ornate settings. Here too his solid, sculpted figures and decorative drapery reflect the influence of Rubens.
The paintings he made for the sacristy of the Cathedral of Mexico are widely regarded as the high point of his career, although he fulfilled many other commissions for churches in Mexico City and in Puebla. He also enjoyed success as a portrait painter, portraying Archbishop Francisco de Aguiar y Seixas, among others. In 1686 he was named a director (one of the three) of the painters’ guild in Mexico, a sign of the esteem in which other painters held him.
Although Villalpando looked to the work of Rubens for inspiration, his painting reflects the development of a local Mexican style. His painterly brushwork, anatomical irregularities, and use of expressive gestures and poses drawn from Mannerism were all elements of this style.