Giovanni Paolo Panini and studio (Piacenza 1691-1765 Rome)
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Giovanni Paolo Panini and studio (Piacenza 1691-1765 Rome)

A capriccio with figures gathered around the Obelisk of Augustus, a view of the Pantheon, the Statue of Marcus Aurelius and the Temple of Sybil, Tivoli

Details
Giovanni Paolo Panini and studio (Piacenza 1691-1765 Rome)
A capriccio with figures gathered around the Obelisk of Augustus, a view of the Pantheon, the Statue of Marcus Aurelius and the Temple of Sybil, Tivoli
oil on canvas
52¾ x 45 3/8 in. (133.9 x 115.3 cm.)
Provenance
Private collection, Trieste.
with De Zucco Antiquari, Trieste.
Literature
F. Arisi, Gian Paolo Panini e i fasti della Roma del '700, Rome, 1986, p. 463, listed under no. 496, as one of three known versions.
Special notice
From time to time, Christie's may offer a lot which it owns in whole or in part. This is such a lot.

Lot Essay

This work is a replica of the painting in the Royal Collection at Windsor Castle (inv. 2857). Another version of this painting was offered with a pendant capriccio (sale; Sotheby's, New York, 19 May 1994, lot 64, for $387,500) and Arisi (op. cit) makes references to two other versions, differing slightly in size and composition.

Giovanni Paolo Panini was born in Piacenza and received his early training in the studio of Bolognese stage designers. After moving to Rome by 1711, he studied briefly with Benedetto Luti. Panini specialized in capricci of Roman ruins and in recording events of historical significance, though it is the former for which he is best known. Of these, some are accurate topographical records (vedute reale) while others are all or in part imaginary, composed perhaps as a pastiche of real views (vedute ideale). This genre of painting, with a primary focus on classical ruins, was known as Rovinismo, and was practiced by a sizeable group of painters including Bartholomeus Breenbergh, Viviano Codazzi, and Giovanni Ghisolfi. In 1732, Panini was elected a member of the French Academy in Rome, where he taught classes in optics and perspective.

Prof. Ferdinando Arisi has confirmed the attribution to Panini.

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