拍品专文
Independent still life paintings by Ligozzi are exceedingly rare. The present painting is one of a matched pair in the Lodi collection. Only two other independent still life paintings by Ligozzi are known: a pair of vases and flowers in an Italian private collection (J.T. Spike, The Sense of Pleasure, 2002, nos. 5-6). The fact that the four paintings have identical dimensions, and symmetrical compositions, suggests that they were executed together for a highly sophisticated patron, given the rarity of floral decorations in Florence at this time. The delicate brushwork and miniaturist details combined with strong, simple contours have a Renaissance flavor that suggests a date as early as 1600.
The Florentine school of still life traces its origins to the natural science illustrations made by Jacopo Ligozzi for the Medici dukes. The Veronese artist was recommended by Ulisse Aldrovandi to Francesco I de' Medici, who called Ligozzi to Florence around 1577 in order to document the flowers, herbs and fruits cultivated in the granducal gardens. The Gabinetto Disegni Stampe degli Uffizi still preserves many of Ligozzi's luminous illustrations of exotic flora and fauna in tempera on white paper. His style, though painstakingly studied, always retained a Mannerist elegance expressive of his birth in the mid-sixteenth century. Appreciating this quality, the Medici Grand Dukes translated his drawings of flowers into designs for magnificent tables inlaid with pietre dure.
We are grateful to Dr. John Spike for the above catalogue entry.
The Florentine school of still life traces its origins to the natural science illustrations made by Jacopo Ligozzi for the Medici dukes. The Veronese artist was recommended by Ulisse Aldrovandi to Francesco I de' Medici, who called Ligozzi to Florence around 1577 in order to document the flowers, herbs and fruits cultivated in the granducal gardens. The Gabinetto Disegni Stampe degli Uffizi still preserves many of Ligozzi's luminous illustrations of exotic flora and fauna in tempera on white paper. His style, though painstakingly studied, always retained a Mannerist elegance expressive of his birth in the mid-sixteenth century. Appreciating this quality, the Medici Grand Dukes translated his drawings of flowers into designs for magnificent tables inlaid with pietre dure.
We are grateful to Dr. John Spike for the above catalogue entry.