MICHELANGELO MAESTRI (ROME d. 1812)
MICHELANGELO MAESTRI (ROME d. 1812)
MICHELANGELO MAESTRI (ROME d. 1812)
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MICHELANGELO MAESTRI (ROME d. 1812)
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MICHELANGELO MAESTRI (ROME d. 1812)

Four allegories of the hours of day and night, after Raphael

Details
MICHELANGELO MAESTRI (ROME d. 1812)
Four allegories of the hours of day and night, after Raphael
signed 'Mich. Ang. Maestri f.' (lower right) and inscribed 'Rafaele d'Urb. inv.' (lower left); inscribed (i) 'Ora Prima di Giorno'; (ii) 'Ora Quarta di Giorno'; (iii) 'Ora Quarta di Notte'; (iv) 'Ora Sesta di Notte' (lower center)
bodycolor on paper, over etched outline, painted framing lines
17 1⁄8 x 13 in. (43.5 x 33 cm)(4)
4
Provenance
Anonymous sale; Christie's, New York, 11 January 1989, lots 115 and 116.

Brought to you by

Giada Damen, Ph.D.
Giada Damen, Ph.D. AVP, Specialist, Head of Sale

Lot Essay

Michelangelo Maestri was an artist active in Rome between the 18th and the 19th Centuries. He is mainly known for his gouaches inspired by the frescoes of Renaissance artists such as Raphael and Giulio Romano. Maestri also based his compositions on the recently discovered wall decorations in Pompeii. His drawings, which are often executed over etched outline, were popular among Grand Tourists visiting Rome and Southern Italy.

These four gouaches belong to a series, The Hours of Day and Night, which included twelve compositions (six hours of the day and six hours of the night). The inscriptions reveal that Maestri based his drawings on originals by Raphael and his pupils; the artist freely reinterpreted figures from the fresco decorations in the Villa Farnesina and the Vatican.

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