Giovanni Baglione (Rome 1571-1644)
Giovanni Baglione (Rome 1571-1644)

A young man attending an older kneeling man

細節
Giovanni Baglione (Rome 1571-1644)
A young man attending an older kneeling man
inscribed 'Raffaelo Urbino'
black, red and white chalk, on light brown paper, squared in black chalk, losses
11 x 8¾ in. (28 x 22 cm.)
來源
A noble European family, since the early 20th Century.

榮譽呈獻

Harriet West
Harriet West

查閱狀況報告或聯絡我們查詢更多拍品資料

登入
瀏覽狀況報告

拍品專文

This squared study for an unknown picture, possibly a Liberation of Saint Peter, is characteristic of Baglione's highly-disciplined technique. The soft tonal hatching, combined with touches of heightening on coloured paper, creates a powerful sense of plasticity and gives the drawing an exceptional descriptive naturalism and immediacy. The face of the young man is typically Baglionesque and similar types appear in the study for Joseph and Potiphar's Wife in the Alte Pinakothek (M. Smith O'Neil, Giovanni Baglione. Artistic Reputation in Baroque Rome, Cambridge, 2002, pl. 84) and in The Birth of the Virgin in the British Museum (inv. T-12-55; op. cit., pl. 88). The physiognomy of the kneeling man is likewise similar to that of the figures in Saints Paul and Stephen, a painting now in the Musée Magnin, Dijon (op. cit., pl. 54), and the preparatory study for Saint Charles Borromeo and Saint Philip Neri, in the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge (op. cit., pl. 62). In all his works, Baglione was deeply influenced by Raphael, seeking to ally the central Italian tradition of disegno with colouristic naturalism.

We are grateful to Dr Maryvelma Smith O'Neil for her assistance in preparing this catalogue entry and for saying, on the basis of a photograph, that she believes the drawing to be by Giovanni Baglione.

更多來自 古典大師及英國繪畫與水彩

查看全部
查看全部