Details
No Description
Provenance
Acquired by Henry Blundell before 1803, and by inheritance
Literature
Ince Catalogue, 1803, p.233, no.LXXV, 'Eleanora is here applying her lips to the extraction of the poison from Edward's arm, which was supposed to have been received from an envenomed arrow. There is great expression of grief in all the attendants. This was painted by Ademolli, a young painter of great genius at Florence, where his works are much admired'

Lot Essay

Trained in Milan and Rome, Ademollo was called to Florence at the age of twenty-five to execute decorations in the Teatro della Pergola, now lost. He remained in Florence for the rest of his life and became one of the leading neoclassical painters in Tuscany, executing frescoes in the Palazzi Pitti, Pucci and Capponi in Florence as well as in other Tuscan cities. For other works by him, see A. Cera, La pittura neoclassica italiana, 1987, pls.1-9.

Henry Blundell also owned a small drawing of the same subject by Ademollo (Ince Catalogue, 1803, p.253, no.CLVII), as well as a pair of pictures of 'Bacchus and Ariadne' and 'The Battle of the Centaurs and the Lapiths', sold in these Rooms, 18 Dec. 1980, lot 129

More from OLD MASTER PICTURES

View All
View All