Today, Peter Paul Rubens is best remembered as the Old Master with a penchant for fleshy, pink nudes and baroque grandiosity. These perceptions suggest a man of unchecked libertinism, but Rubens was in fact a man of controlled appetites, with a modest disposition and a reputation for tact and discretion. Almost inevitably, given his proximity to monarchs and statesmen across Europe, he was conscripted into political service as a covert diplomat and spy; his artistic work could always provide cover for his clandestine activities.

Peter Paul Rubens, Diplomat - WSJ.com

AMAZING article by Mark Lamster in the WSJ.

If that opening paragraph doesn’t grab you….. I think you should read it again because you must have missed the power of it.

I need to read more on the topic, but is this the first known example of a type of cultural diplomacy?? Are there other significant examples of artists playing such a directly political role using the power of their artistic talent to forge policy decisions?