Alberto Pasini (Italian, 1826-1899)
Alberto Pasini (Italian, 1826-1899)

Mercato Orientale

細節
Alberto Pasini (Italian, 1826-1899)
Mercato Orientale
signed and dated 'A.Pasini.1884.' (lower right)
oil on canvas
18.7/8 x 28.5/8 in. (47.9 x 72.7 cm.)
Painted in 1884
來源
Commendatore Sebastiano Sandri, Turin.
Edmundo Sacerdoti, Galleria d'Arte, Milan.
Schiapparelli Arte, Biella.
出版
Exhibition catalogue, Galleria d'Arte della Gazzetta del Popolo, Turin, 1949, no. 55.
M. Bernardi, exhibition catalogue, Galleria Fogliato, Turin, 1949 (illustrated, pl. 55).
M. Bernardi, exhibition catalogue, Galleria Fogliato, Turin, 1954, no. 97 (illustrated, pl. VII).
E. Piceni and M. Monteverdi, Gli animali nella pittura italiana dell'800, Milan, 1966 (illustrated pl. X, as Cavalli arabi al mercato).
V. Botteri Cardoso, Pasini; catalogue raisonn of the artist's oeuvre, Genoa, 1991, p. 350, no. 752.
展覽
Turin, Galleria d'Arte della Gazzetta del Popolo, Mostra Commemorativa di A. Pasini e G. B. Quadrone, April-May 1949, no. 55.
Turin, Galleria Fogliato, 1954.
Rome, Associazione Via Frattina, Mostra dei Maestri dell'Ottocento Pittorico Italiano, 21 April-5 May 1967.

拍品專文

Painted in 1884, Mercato Orientale is a unique example of Pasini's mature oeuvre. It is the ultimate tour de force of an artist at the peak of his artistic career, who, after many adventurous expeditions to the Orient and the Mediterranean, left Paris at the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War and settled down in a secluded villa in Cavoretto, in the countryside surrounding Turin. Here, surrounded by a precious collection of contemporary art including paintings by Chassriau, Decamps, Signac, Klimt, and the Japanese Hokusai and Utamaro, Pasini developed his refined technical skills to a level of virtuosismo he had longed for since his Parisian years. In Cavoretto, the artist reflected upon his five trips to the East, rediscovering the wealth of drawings, bozzetti and notes that he had rapidly - yet compulsively - sketched during his expeditions through the desert.

The year 1884 was particularly successful for Pasini. Sending his paintings from his Piedmontese retreat, he participated in the prestigious Parisian Exposition Internationale de la rue de Sze - which met with an enthusiastic response from the French critics, who called Pasini 'a new Canaletto' - and to the Italian Exhibition of Venice and Turin. At these international venues the artist was represented with his latest Orientalist and Venetian scenes. In fact, after his discovery of the Serenissima in 1876, Pasini successfully fused Venetian and Eastern iconographies - Venice's opulent decadence greatly influencing his late Orientalist corpus. Fired by the jewel-like chromatic feast of Venetian Byzantine domes and baroque faades, Pasini developed an exuberant, almost manneristic palette, perfectly demonstrated in the present painting. The lime greens, intense oranges, and acid yellows of Mercato Orientale have an original, metallic vibration recalling Oriental silks, Turkish tiles, Persian striking miniatures and, above all, the neat transparency of Northern Italian light.

Whilst perfectly mastering these chromatic experiments, Pasini displays in the present oil an unrivalled control over the line - sharply defining his figures and capturing the details of their extraordinary expressions and gestures. Mercato Orientale thus combines Pasini's supreme command of drawing technique - learned whilst an apprentice etcher in the prestigious Parisian studio of Charles and Eugne Ciceri - with his vivid sense of rich pigments which Andrea Baboni calls 'una materia pittorica ricca e scintillante nell'ampia variet del tocco - ora steso per morbidi impasti, ora scattante e plastico, grasso qua e l negli spessori di spatola, sontuoso di smalti nelle succose, libere e sciolte vibrazioni coloristiche...' (catalogue of the exhibition Alberto Pasini, da Parma a Costantinopoli via Parigi, Parma, 1996, p. 43).

Pasini's versatile ductus finds in Mercato Orientale the most diverse technical expressions - from the smooth, thicker impasto, to the dryer, essential and elegant touches of spatula - resulting in a perfectly orchestrated feast of chromatic clashes and harmonies, chiaroscuri and contrasts, acid and earthy nuances, Eastern and Western refinements.