ALESSANDRO TURCHI, CALLED L'ORBETTO (VERONA 1578-1649 ROME)
ALESSANDRO TURCHI, CALLED L'ORBETTO (VERONA 1578-1649 ROME)
ALESSANDRO TURCHI, CALLED L'ORBETTO (VERONA 1578-1649 ROME)
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ALESSANDRO TURCHI, CALLED L'ORBETTO (VERONA 1578-1649 ROME)
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ALESSANDRO TURCHI, CALLED L'ORBETTO (VERONA 1578-1649 ROME)

Diana and Acteon

Details
ALESSANDRO TURCHI, CALLED L'ORBETTO (VERONA 1578-1649 ROME)
Diana and Acteon
oil on canvas
38 3⁄8 x 53 1⁄8 in. (97.5 x 135 cm.)
Provenance
Private collection, Scotland, probably Pitlour House, Fife, Scotland (according to a label at the reverse).
Anonymous sale; Lyon & Turnbull, Edinburgh, 26 May 2006, lot 29.
with Adam Williams Fine Art, New York, from whom acquired in January 2009.
Literature
Burlington Magazine, September 2008, illustrated.
D. Alberge, 'Rubens and Neo-Classical Art' in M. Merrony (ed.), Mougins Museum of Classical Art, France, 2011, pp. 298-299, illustrated p. 297, fig. 8.
M. Merrony, Musée d'Art Classique de Mougins. La collection famille Levett, France, 2012, p. 80.
D. Scaglietti Kelescian, Alessandro Turchi detto l’Orbetto. 1578-1649, Verona, 2019, p. 238, n°135 and p. 510, illustrated p. 238.
Exhibited
Musée d'Art Classique de Mougins, 2011 - 2023 (Inv. no. MMoCA42MA).

Brought to you by

Claudio Corsi
Claudio Corsi Specialist, Head of Department

Lot Essay


Alessandro Turchi was born in Verona, where he trained in the studio of Felice Brusasorci. Influenced in his early career by the compositions of Veronese, by 1615 Turchi was working in Rome, alongside Giovanni Lanfranco and Carlo Saraceni, on the Sala Regia in the Palazzo del Quirinale. Turchi's success in the Quirinale led to commissions from, among others, Caravaggio's ambitious patron, Cardinal Scipione Borghese. By 1619 he was well established in Rome's artistic community, joining the Accademia di San Luca and serving as its Principe after Pietro da Cortona in 1637. The nickname ‘Orbetto’ (the diminutive of orbo, ‘blind man’) was often used from the second half of the 1600s to refer to the artist, and probably assigned to him after his death. It was likely derived from his assistance to his father, who according to the Verona tax census of 1595 was referred to as ‘cecus mendicans olim spatarius’ (‘blind, dependent on alms, formerly sword-maker’). In addition to religious works, Turchi painted numerous mythological subjects throughout his career for both Italian and foreign patrons. By 1640 the painter's success in this was such that he caught the eye of Phélypeaux de La Vrillière, an influential Frenchman in Rome who also commissioned pictures from Pietro da Cortona and Guercino, and for whom Turchi painted The Death of Antony and Cleopatra (Paris, Musée du Louvre).

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