Annibale Carracci (Bologna 1560-1595)
Annibale Carracci (Bologna 1560-1595)

A man as Bacchus drinking wine, with two youths, a magpie, and an ape

Details
Annibale Carracci (Bologna 1560-1595)
A man as Bacchus drinking wine, with two youths, a magpie, and an ape
oil on canvas, unframed
52.1/8 x 38.1/8 in. (132.3 x 96.8 cm.)
Provenance
(Probably) 'Cavaliere Ambra' (by whom commissioned, according to Baldinucci) who was presumably (according to Ewald, 1974) Giovanni Battista d'Ambra, Cavaliere dell'Ordine di S. Stefano (1642-1725).
(Probably) Anton Francesco d'Ambra (1653-1725), by whom lent to the 1724 exhibition (see below).
Count Alessandro Contini-Bonacossi, Florence, 1930 (according to a label on the reverse).
Private collection, Spain.
Literature
(Possibly) F. Baldinucci (1681-1728), Notizie de' professori del disegno da Cimabue in qua, Florence, 1847 edition, V, pp. 537-538.
H. Voss, 'Zur Kritik des Velazquez-Werkes', Jahrbuch der preussischen Kunstsammlungen, 1932, LIII, p. 38.
R. Longhi and A. Mayer, Gli Antichi Pittori Spagnoli della Collezione Contini-Bonacossi, Rome, 1938, p. 33, no. 61, as Velzquez.
G. Ewald in catalogue of the exhibition, Gli ultimi Medici, Il tardo barocco a Firenze, 1670-1743, Detroit, Institute of Arts and Palazzo Pitti, Florence, 1974, p. 179, under no. 169.
G. Ewald, 'Livio Mehus's Genius of Sculpture', The Burlington Magazine, July 1974, CXVI, p. 392, fig. 39.
M. Gregori in catalogue of the exhibition, Il Seicento Fiorentino, Arte a Firenze da Ferdinando I a Cosimo III, Palazzo Strozzi, Florence, 1986-1987, p. 468, under no. 1.266.
Exhibited
(Probably) Florence, San Luca alla Santissima Annunziata, 1724 (see Nota de'Quadri e opere di scultura che sono esposti per la festa di S. Luca dagli Accademici del disegno nella loro capella posta nel chiostro del Monastero de PP. della SS. Nonziata di Firenze, L'Anno 1724, p. 9 'un Ritratto di Livio Mehus fatto da se medesimo con un putto che dipinge'), lent by Francesco d'Ambra.

Lot Essay

Attributions to both Bartolommeo Passarotti and Agostino Carracci have been suggested, but both Sir Denis Mahon and Dr. Stephen Pepper consider that this picture is a relatively early work, of the early 1580s, of Annibale Carracci. It was evidently always rather thinly painted, but the modelling of the child on the left and the servant on the right seem fully characteristic of the artist.

We are grateful to Dr. Stephen Pepper and Sir Denis Mahon, who have examined the picture.

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