Reversing the Trend
Giovanni Antonio Pellegrini, Allegory of Painting, c. 1730, Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice, Oil on canvas, 143 x 132 cm |
Canaletto, The Piazzetta, looking towards the Torre dell’ Orologia, 1726-8, Royal Collection, oil on canvas, 172.1 134.9 cm |
With the popularity of artists like Tiepolo, Fragonard and
Boucher, it’s salutary to remember that once this kind of painting full of
fantasy and colour, and produced for a rich elite, was attacked by art
historians just after the Second World War. Leading the charge was the veteran
Italian scholar, Roberto Longhi, who during the age of Italian neo-realism, defended
18th century genre artists like Longhi whilst dismissing Tiepolo and
his rhetorical style. The trend has been
reversed due to publications by Francis Haskell, Michael Levey and others who
have worked hard to put Tiepolo and Canaletto in context and offer a less
biased summary. Today, Longhi’s criticisms are virtually forgotten, and
Tiepolo, the “presiding genius” of the 18th century (Levey) is
celebrated in publications, high profile exhibitions that give the lie to the
idea of the 18th century as a frivolous interval between the main acts
of the 17th and 19th centuries. The story of 18th European art is
also one of collecting by foreigners residing in Venice, though Tiepolo himself
does not figure much in that story. Two of greatest foreign patrons in Venice,
Consul John Smith and Marshall Schulenberg, did not own one Tiepolo. Their
taste was completely at variance too: Smith preferred land scape and views;
Schulenberg opted for history, portraits and genre.
Rosalba Carriera and the Intimation of Elegance in Venice.
Marco Ricci, Rehearsal of an Opera showing the competition between the divas Catherine Tofts and Margherita de L'Epine, 1709,Yale Centre for British Art, oil on canvas. |
In his comprehensive and unsurpassed overview of painting
and patronage of the Italian baroque, Francis Haskell shows how Venice’s
neutrality marked by a long period of peace, served to attract many foreign
patrons and scholars, especially the British. This was good news to aspiring
artists. To give just one example: Christian Cole, Secretary to the British
Ambassador, chanced upon a young Venetian girl, Rosalba Carriera painting
snuff-boxes and miniatures on ivory. Cole persuaded her to take up pastel
portraits; and within months she was feted and compared to baroque artists of
the preceding century.[1]
Cole would eventually fall out with the Republic and return to England; he took
with him the painters Pellegrini (Rosalba’s brother-in-law) and Marco Ricci,
brother of Sebastiano. Collectors from other nations like the Prince Elector of
Saxony, later Augustus III of Poland who acquired Carriera’s work and sustained
the career of Bernardo Bellotto (Canaletto’s nephew) in Dresden, were typical
of the new kind of patron. From France, Pierre Crozat, patron of Watteau, visited
Venice and admired Rosalba’s art immensely. Rosalba later went to Paris and was
lodged in Crozat’s house where she met Antoine Watteau, the instigator of the
rococo, and Hyacinth Rigaud who had softened the formal style of the Grand
Siècle portrait. Both expressed their great admiration for Rosalba’s art, and as
Haskell rightly says, “She gave a stimulus to a type of elegant yet intimate
portraiture”[2]
which might be coined as the style label “Venetian rococo”.
Visions and Vedute.
Canaletto, Piazza San Marco: Looking East Across the Central Line, late 1720s, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, oil on canvas, 68.6 x 112.4 cm. |
G. B. Tiepolo, Ceiling of the Gesuati Church, Venice. |
Canaletto, The Grand Canal from Campo San Vio towards the Bacino, 1729-34, Royal Collection, Oil on canvas, 46 x 77,5 cm. |
Canaletto, The Stonemason’s Yard, 1726-30, National Gallery, London, Oil on canvas, 124 x 163 cm. |
Anybody casting an eye over the state of Venetian art in the
late 17th and early 18th centuries might be forgiven for
thinking that it fell into two distinctive categories. Firstly, there were the
decorations of noble palaces and the ceilings of churches: allegories and
apotheoses that might be collectively called the painting of visions, both
sacred and secular. Then there was the growing interest in recording views of
Venice to satisfy the hunger of collectors and connoisseurs interested in
architecture, perspective or eager for a memento of Venice on the Grand Tour:
this could be called vedute painting which was touched on in the last course. The first strand was amply taken care of by
artists such as Bambini, Algarotti, Piazzetta, and above all Tiepolo with his
decoration of churches like the Scalzi and Gesuati in Venice, as well as
canvases for the Palazzo Dolfin. The second was the preserve of artists like
Carlevarijs, Guardi and above all Canaletto. Canaletto’s career was boosted by
the patronage of another English patron: Joseph Smith who wasn’t a printmaker
or an international traveller. A connoisseur and patron of some distinction who
spent most of his life in Venice as a partner in a banking firm, Smith is
interesting for us as his taste reflects the two backgrounds of English and
Venetian which Haskell captures brilliantly in his survey of his life and art
patronage. [3]
Consul Smith: An Englishman Abroad.
Canaletto, The Piazzetta, looking towards the Torre dell’ Orologia, 1726-8, Royal Collection, oil on canvas, 172.1 134.9 cm. |
Canaletto, The Piazzetta, looking towards the Torre dell’ Orologia, 1726-7, Royal Collection, pen and brownish black ink over pencil, 25.4 x 18 cm. |
Antonio Visentino, Architectural Fantasy, 1764-72, Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice, Oil on canvas, 130 x 92 cm |
Smith established himself as a merchant in 1709 rising to
the prestigious, though modestly paid office of British Consul to Venice in
1744. Living in a palace in the English taste on the Grand Canal, Smith
entertained many important cultural luminaries; he was an avid devotee of opera
and theatre, and married the controversial opera singer Catherine Tofts. The
celebrated dramatist Goldoni wrote a play about him and entitled it, perhaps
with some irony: Il Filosofo Inglese.
Walpole sarcastically dubbed him “The Merchant of Venice” and he appears to
have been generally disliked. Yet he was an ardent collector who started in the
1720s with works by Sebastiano Ricci at a time when Tiepolo was virtually
unknown and his tutor Lazzarini had retired. Smith also owned a series of works
by Veronese, probably acquired as a section of his studio, but as yet there was
nothing from which an individual taste might be inferred. In the 1720s Smith
also patronised Rosalba Carriera who was working for him by 1723. His collection contained pastel portraits by
her including a portrait of a young woman called “Winter.”[4]
By 1730- when Smith was 55- he had an impressive, though stylistically
unremarkable collection, consisting of Sebastiano and Marco Ricci, Carlo
Cignani (Bologna), Rosalba, and possibly some Piazzetta. However, the direction
of Smith’s collection completely changes with Canaletto’s arrival on the scene
in the 1720s.
Views of Canaletto’s
Views of Venice.
Giovanni Antonio Canal was born in Venice, near the Rialto on
28th October, 1697, the son of a theatrical painter. Why and when he
was named Canaletto, “the little canal” is not known.[5]
Nor is it documented if Canaletto met the founder of the vedute school of
Venetian painting, Carlevarijs, but an encounter seems highly likely since the
latter painted the Rialto. Canaletto was first introduced to English collectors
by an Irishman, Owen McSwiney, who was a friend of the artist’s major patron
Joseph Smith. In 1730, Smith emerged in the role he played for many years: “the
purveyor of Canaletto’s work to the English visitor in Venice.”[6]
Smith’s collection of Canalettos would comprise the following: 49 paintings,
143 drawings, and 46 etchings. These went to George III and thence into the
Royal Collection and these are the most significant holdings of Canaletto today.
[7]
The banker’s first Canalettos were six views of San Marco, “impressionistic” in
style, which some would say were his finest works rather than the later
paintings for which he is better known. In
fact as Haskell observed, critics and connoisseurs in England were surprised in
the stylistic difference between the pictures Canaletto painted in Venice
(which they deemed better) and those figurative paintings of English locations
executed in a dry manner.[8]
With the outbreak of the War of the Austrian Succession in 1741 making travel
difficult, demand for Canaletto’s art fell, though the English could not
complain they didn’t have enough of his art on their walls! Canaletto also had
to contend with rivals like Marieschi and Guardi who also specialised in Venetian
vedute. Interestingly, though Guardi’s atmospheric, sketchy style might have
met with the approval of these English critics envious of Canaletto’s early phase,
in their eyes Guardi failed to measure up against the veteran view painter
despite his “romanticism.” For these connoisseurs, Guardi lacked the accuracy
of Canaletto which helped to perpetuate a stereotypical view of the latter only
to be modified near the end of the 19th century.[9]
Marshall Schulenberg: A Soldier in Venice.
1.
Gian Antonio Guardi, Count Johann Matthias von
der Schulenburg, 1740, location unknown, oil on canvas.
G. B. Piazzetta, “Feeding the Dog”, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, black chalk, highlighted with white chalk, on blue-gray paper faded to brown, 5-1/2 x 20-9/16 in. (39.3 x 52.3 cm) |
G.B. Tiepolo, Portrait of Daniele IV Dolfin, 1750s, Fondazione Querini Stampalia, Venice, Oil on canvas, 235 x 158 cm. |
1.
G.B. Tiepolo, The Triumph of Marius, 1725-29,
oil on canvas, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 558.8 x
326.7 cm.
Slides.
1.
G.B. Tiepolo, Alexander the Great and Campaspe
in the Studio of Apelles, c. 1740, Getty Museum, Los Angeles, oil on canvas, 16
9/16 x 21 1/4 in.
2. Giovanni Antonio Pellegrini, Allegory of Painting, c. 1730, Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice, Oil on canvas, 143 x 132 cm.[11]
3. Rosalba Carriera, Self-Portrait holding a portrait of her Sister, 1715, Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence, Pastel on paper, 71 x 57 cm.
4. Pietro Antonio Rotari, King Augustus III of Poland, 1755, Gemäldegalerie, Dresden, Oil on canvas, 108 x 86 cm.
5. Rosalba Carriera, Gustavus Hamilton (1710–1746), Second Viscount Boyne, in Masquerade Costume, 1730-31, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Pastel on paper, laid down on canvas, 22 1/4 x 16 7/8 in. (56.5 x 42.9 cm).[12]
6. Rosalba Carriera, Portrait of the diva Faustina Bordoni Hasse, 1730s, Museo del Settecento Veneziano, Ca' Rezzonico, Venice, Pastel on paper.
7. Marco Ricci, Rehearsal of an Opera showing the competition between the divas Catherine Tofts and Margherita de L'Epine, 1709,Yale Centre for British Art, oil on canvas.[13]
8. Domingo Antonio Velasco, Portrait of Domenico Scarlatti, 1738, oil on canvas, location unknown.[14]
9. Rosalba Carriera, Winter, c. 1725, The Hermitage, St. Petersburg, Pastel on grey paper pasted on cardboard, 24 x 19 cm
10. Jacopo Amigoni, Portrait of a Lady, 1729-39, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Black, white, and red chalk, with pastel on brownish paper, 11 7/16 x 9 5/8 in. (29.0 x 24.5 cm).[15]
11. G.B. Tiepolo, Woman with a Parrot, 1760-61, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, Oil on canvas.
12. Antonio Visentini (after G.B. Piazzetta), Portrait of Giovanni Antonio Canal, called Canaletto, before 1735, Royal Collection, Windsor, Engraving.
13. Canaletto, The Stonemason’s Yard, 1726-30, National Gallery, London, Oil on canvas, 124 x 163 cm.[16]
14. Canaletto, Piazza San Marco: Looking East Across the Central Line, late 1720s, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, oil on canvas, 68.6 x 112.4 cm.[17]
15. Canaletto, The Piazzetta, looking towards the Torre dell’ Orologia, 1726-8, Royal Collection, oil on canvas, 172.1 134.9 cm.[18]
16. Canaletto, The Piazzetta, looking towards the Torre dell’ Orologia, 1726-7, Royal Collection, pen and brownish black ink over pencil, 25.4 x 18 cm.[19]
17. Canaletto, The Grand Canal from Campo San Vio towards the Bacino, 1729-34, Royal Collection, Oil on canvas, 46 x 77,5 cm.[20]
18. Canaletto, The Grand Canal with the Scalzi and S. Simeone Piccolo, oil on canvas, National Gallery, London, 1730s, oil on canvas, 124.5 x 204.6 cm.[21]
19. Antonio Visentino, Album, plate 11: view of the Grand Canal from the Carmelitani Scalzi to the Tintore Molin Pen and brown ink.
20. Photograph of the Scalzi Church on the Grand Canal, DP, 2010.
21. Piazzetta (?), Design for the frontispiece of an album with bust portraits of Canaletto and Visentini in ovals set into an elaborate frame, 1735-42, British Museum, Pen and brown ink
22. Antonio Visentino, Architectural Fantasy, 1764-72, Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice, Oil on canvas, 130 x 92 cm.[22]
23. Francesco Guardi, Night-time Procession in Piazza San Marco, 1758, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, Oil on canvas, 48 x 85 cm.
24. Palazzo Dolfin, now part of University of Venice.
25. G.B. Tiepolo, The Triumph of Marius, 1725-29, oil on canvas, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, irregular painted surface, Irregular painted surface, 558.8 x 326.7 cm.
26. G.B. Tiepolo, The Capture of Carthage, 1725-29, oil on canvas, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 411.5 x 376.9 cm.
27. G.B. Tiepolo, Portrait of Daniele IV Dolfin, 1750s, Fondazione Querini Stampalia, Venice, Oil on canvas, 235 x 158 cm.
28. Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo, Turkish Lancer and Onlookers Approaching a Town, c. 1760, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, pen and brown ink, brush and pale brown wash, over black chalk; framing outlines by the artist in pen and brown ink, 8 x 24 in. (45.7 x 61 cm) sheet: 11 1/4 x 16 3/16 in. (28.5 x 41.1 cm).[23]
29. Gian Antonio Guardi, Count Johann Matthias von der Schulenburg, 1740, location unknown, oil on canvas.
30. Giambattista Pittoni, The Sacrifice of Polyxena, The Hermitage, St. Petersburg, Oil on canvas, 129 x 94 cm.
31. Giovanni Antonio Pellegrini, The Head of Pompey Presented to Julius Caesar (recto); Study for an Elaborate Door Frame (verso), Pen and brown ink, brush and brown wash, over red and black chalk; traces of white chalk at upper right edge (recto); pen and brown ink, brush and brown wash, over black chalk; and another black chalk sketch (verso), Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 28.7 x 37.3 cm.[24]
32. Johann Gottfried Haid, Portrait of Giovanni Battista Piazzetta, early 18th century, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, mezzotint.
33. G.B. Piazzetta, Idyll at the Coast, c. 1741, Wallraf-Richartz-Museum, Cologne, Oil on canvas, 197 x 146 cm.
34. G. B. Piazzetta, “Feeding the Dog”, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, black chalk, highlighted with white chalk, on blue-gray paper faded to brown, 5-1/2 x 20-9/16 in. (39.3 x 52.3 cm).[25]
35. G. Ceruiti, Evening at the Piazza, c. 1730, Museo Civico d'Arte Antica, Palazzo Madama, Turin, Oil on canvas, 210 x 298 cm.[26]
2. Giovanni Antonio Pellegrini, Allegory of Painting, c. 1730, Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice, Oil on canvas, 143 x 132 cm.[11]
3. Rosalba Carriera, Self-Portrait holding a portrait of her Sister, 1715, Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence, Pastel on paper, 71 x 57 cm.
4. Pietro Antonio Rotari, King Augustus III of Poland, 1755, Gemäldegalerie, Dresden, Oil on canvas, 108 x 86 cm.
5. Rosalba Carriera, Gustavus Hamilton (1710–1746), Second Viscount Boyne, in Masquerade Costume, 1730-31, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Pastel on paper, laid down on canvas, 22 1/4 x 16 7/8 in. (56.5 x 42.9 cm).[12]
6. Rosalba Carriera, Portrait of the diva Faustina Bordoni Hasse, 1730s, Museo del Settecento Veneziano, Ca' Rezzonico, Venice, Pastel on paper.
7. Marco Ricci, Rehearsal of an Opera showing the competition between the divas Catherine Tofts and Margherita de L'Epine, 1709,Yale Centre for British Art, oil on canvas.[13]
8. Domingo Antonio Velasco, Portrait of Domenico Scarlatti, 1738, oil on canvas, location unknown.[14]
9. Rosalba Carriera, Winter, c. 1725, The Hermitage, St. Petersburg, Pastel on grey paper pasted on cardboard, 24 x 19 cm
10. Jacopo Amigoni, Portrait of a Lady, 1729-39, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Black, white, and red chalk, with pastel on brownish paper, 11 7/16 x 9 5/8 in. (29.0 x 24.5 cm).[15]
11. G.B. Tiepolo, Woman with a Parrot, 1760-61, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, Oil on canvas.
12. Antonio Visentini (after G.B. Piazzetta), Portrait of Giovanni Antonio Canal, called Canaletto, before 1735, Royal Collection, Windsor, Engraving.
13. Canaletto, The Stonemason’s Yard, 1726-30, National Gallery, London, Oil on canvas, 124 x 163 cm.[16]
14. Canaletto, Piazza San Marco: Looking East Across the Central Line, late 1720s, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, oil on canvas, 68.6 x 112.4 cm.[17]
15. Canaletto, The Piazzetta, looking towards the Torre dell’ Orologia, 1726-8, Royal Collection, oil on canvas, 172.1 134.9 cm.[18]
16. Canaletto, The Piazzetta, looking towards the Torre dell’ Orologia, 1726-7, Royal Collection, pen and brownish black ink over pencil, 25.4 x 18 cm.[19]
17. Canaletto, The Grand Canal from Campo San Vio towards the Bacino, 1729-34, Royal Collection, Oil on canvas, 46 x 77,5 cm.[20]
18. Canaletto, The Grand Canal with the Scalzi and S. Simeone Piccolo, oil on canvas, National Gallery, London, 1730s, oil on canvas, 124.5 x 204.6 cm.[21]
19. Antonio Visentino, Album, plate 11: view of the Grand Canal from the Carmelitani Scalzi to the Tintore Molin Pen and brown ink.
20. Photograph of the Scalzi Church on the Grand Canal, DP, 2010.
21. Piazzetta (?), Design for the frontispiece of an album with bust portraits of Canaletto and Visentini in ovals set into an elaborate frame, 1735-42, British Museum, Pen and brown ink
22. Antonio Visentino, Architectural Fantasy, 1764-72, Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice, Oil on canvas, 130 x 92 cm.[22]
23. Francesco Guardi, Night-time Procession in Piazza San Marco, 1758, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, Oil on canvas, 48 x 85 cm.
24. Palazzo Dolfin, now part of University of Venice.
25. G.B. Tiepolo, The Triumph of Marius, 1725-29, oil on canvas, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, irregular painted surface, Irregular painted surface, 558.8 x 326.7 cm.
26. G.B. Tiepolo, The Capture of Carthage, 1725-29, oil on canvas, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 411.5 x 376.9 cm.
27. G.B. Tiepolo, Portrait of Daniele IV Dolfin, 1750s, Fondazione Querini Stampalia, Venice, Oil on canvas, 235 x 158 cm.
28. Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo, Turkish Lancer and Onlookers Approaching a Town, c. 1760, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, pen and brown ink, brush and pale brown wash, over black chalk; framing outlines by the artist in pen and brown ink, 8 x 24 in. (45.7 x 61 cm) sheet: 11 1/4 x 16 3/16 in. (28.5 x 41.1 cm).[23]
29. Gian Antonio Guardi, Count Johann Matthias von der Schulenburg, 1740, location unknown, oil on canvas.
30. Giambattista Pittoni, The Sacrifice of Polyxena, The Hermitage, St. Petersburg, Oil on canvas, 129 x 94 cm.
31. Giovanni Antonio Pellegrini, The Head of Pompey Presented to Julius Caesar (recto); Study for an Elaborate Door Frame (verso), Pen and brown ink, brush and brown wash, over red and black chalk; traces of white chalk at upper right edge (recto); pen and brown ink, brush and brown wash, over black chalk; and another black chalk sketch (verso), Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 28.7 x 37.3 cm.[24]
32. Johann Gottfried Haid, Portrait of Giovanni Battista Piazzetta, early 18th century, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, mezzotint.
33. G.B. Piazzetta, Idyll at the Coast, c. 1741, Wallraf-Richartz-Museum, Cologne, Oil on canvas, 197 x 146 cm.
34. G. B. Piazzetta, “Feeding the Dog”, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, black chalk, highlighted with white chalk, on blue-gray paper faded to brown, 5-1/2 x 20-9/16 in. (39.3 x 52.3 cm).[25]
35. G. Ceruiti, Evening at the Piazza, c. 1730, Museo Civico d'Arte Antica, Palazzo Madama, Turin, Oil on canvas, 210 x 298 cm.[26]
[1]
Haskell, Patrons and Painters: Art and Society in Baroque Italy, (Yale
University Press, 1980), 277.
[2]
Ibid., 285.
[3] On
Smith, see Suzanne Boorsch, Venetian Prints and Books in the Age of Tiepolo,
exh, cat., MMA, New York, 2007, 15f; Haskell, Patrons and Painters,
297ff.
[4]
Described by Smith (cited in Haskell, 303): “Beautiful female covering herself
with a Pelisse allowed to be the most excellent this Virtuosa ever painted.”
[5]
See J. G. Links: “Canaletto: A Biographical Sketch”, MMA, 3-15.
[6]
Links, Canaletto, 6.
[7]
See the exhibition catalogue for the Canaletto exhibition, (MMA, New
York, 1989), Katharine Baetjer and J. G. Links and essays by Francis Haskell
and Michael Levey and others. See also the earlier catalogue of the exhibition
at the Queen’s Gallery: Canaletto, Paintings and Drawings, 1980-81.
[8]
Haskell, “The Taste for Canaletto” in MMA, . In Haskell’s words: “[the
difference] from the bold, fresh, dramatic touch of his earlier works to his
later more mannered, dry, calligraphic bland manner..”
[9]
Haskell: “..an awareness of Guardi served primarily to reinforce the stereotype
of Canaletto as an absolutely faithful delineator of his native city.” Revaluations
of Canaletto as a painter of other than purely topographical views in favour
seem to begin with Henry James in 1892, as noted by Haskell. James said that he
who emerged from the railway station “seemed to have a Canaletto before him.”
[10]
For the complex story of how three of these Dolfin pictures came to New York,
see Keith Christiansen, “The Ca’ Dolfin Tiepolos”, Metropolitan Museum of Art
Bulletin, Spring, 1998. See Tiepolo catalogue, 12a to 12g.
[11]
Accademia Guide no 202. Prov: 1959 from Count Alvise Guistiniani; last restored
1959. Compared to the pastels of his sister-in-law Rosalba Carriera.
[12]
From Met web site: “Gustavus Hamilton was Irish, born in 1710, and succeeded
his grandfather in 1723 as second Viscount Boyne. This elegant young gentleman
made his Grand Tour of the continent with Edward Walpole (1706–1784), the
second son of the powerful Whig Prime Minister Sir Robert Walpole (1676–1745).
The two were in Venice from late January to March 1730, doubtless for the
Carnival season, and Boyne was there again the following winter. There are
three versions of the present portrait by Rosalba: the second (private
collection) shows the sitter in an identical costume, while the third (Barber
Institute of Arts, University of Birmingham, England) shows him wearing a brown
brocaded coat. All three would have resulted from the sittings for whichever
pastel was painted first and all probably date within a year. The entire
costume, tricorne hat, lace veil, and mask, worn outdoors with a black coat, is
known to Venetians as the bautta and offered its wearer the advantage of
anonymity; it was worn by both residents and visitors to the lagoon city.”
[13] After
performing at Venice between 1698–1700, de L'Epine arrived at London in 1702,
as the mistress of Jakob Greber, although rumours of an affair (1703) with
Daniel Finch, the Earl of Nottingham, indicate that she did not remain
exclusive in her affections for very long. In these early London years she
danced as well as sang, performing at Drury Lane from 1704–1708, and then at
the Queen's Theatre from 1708-1714. Her repertoire initially consisted of songs
and cantatas by such diverse composers as Henry Purcell and Alessandro
Scarlatti, but from 1706 she starred in such Italian operas as began to appear
on London stages at this time, the most popular being Giovanni Bononcini's
Camilla, in which she replaced Catherine Tofts at the fourth performance,
singing the role of the heroine.
[14] Domingo
Antonio Velasco was an Italian painter. He was best known for his portrait of
composer Domenico Scarlatti,which commemorates the dubbing of Domenico into the
Order of Santiago on 21 April 1738 by King John V of Portugal.[2]
[15]
George Szabo, Eighteenth-Century Italian from the Robert Lehmann Collection,
MMA, New York, 1981, no. 1. Szabo dates it to the 1740s and thinks the drawing
could actually be by Amigoni’s daughter.
[16] Canaletto,
New York, 1989, no. 32.
[17]
Canaletto, New York, 1989, no. 27.
[18] Canaletto,
London, 1981, no. 1: Canaletto, New York, 1989, no. 28.
[19] Canaletto,
New York, 1989, no. 88.
[20] Canaletto,
London, 1981, no. 11.
[21]
Beq. By Lord Farnborough, 1838.
[22]
Accademia Guide, no. 308. Exh 1777, influenced by Panini; Acq 1807 fr Old
Acdemy of Venice.
[23] Jacob
Bean, William M. Griswold 18th Century Italian Drawings in The Metropolitan
Museum of Art. Ex. cat. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 1990,
cat. no. 261, fig. no. 261, pp. 262-63, ill. See also Linda Wolk-Simon
"Domenico Tiepolo. Drawings, Prints, and Paintings in The Metropolitan
Museum of Art." the Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin. The Metropolitan
Museum of Art, vol. 54, no. 3, New York, Winter 1996-1997, fig. no. 80, p. 53,
ill.
[24] Bean
and Griswold 18th Century Italian Drawings, cat. no. 156.
[25] Bean
and Griswold 18th Century Italian Drawings, cat. no. 161, fig. no. 161,
pp. 171-72.
[26]
Ceruti was one of the so-called Lombard Painters of Reality (i.e. low-life). He
is now known to have been born in Milan, where he died, but by 1721 he was in
Brescia, and his earliest work (1724) is a signed portrait of a Brescian
patrician: his portraits are influenced by his elder contemporary Ghislandi. He
frescoed the staircase of the Palazzo Grassi in Venice c. 1470 and was back in
Milan by 1757. His present fame is based on his groups of working-class
sitters, ranging from lacemakers to destitute vagabonds, painted in a technique
similar to Ghislandi's, but the subject-matter is far closer to the Le Nain
brothers, and ultimately derived from Caravaggio's realism. His nickname in
Italy is Pitocchetto, the Little Miser. None of his works is dated, and few are
yet in museums.
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