Lot Essay
Francesco Glielmo’s oeuvre is anchored by a single document: the contract of 23 February 1626 for the high altarpiece of The Blessed James of the Marches in Glory above the City of Naples in the Cappellone di San Giacomo della Marca, Santa Maria la Nova, Naples. Around this altarpiece, Giuseppe Porzio has reconstructed a stylistically coherent corpus for the artist, including the Ecce Homo in the Musée Fabre, Montpellier (inv. no. 2012.19.45), Saint Catherine of Alexandria Refusing to Worship the Idols in the Alte Pinakothek, Munich (inv. no. 5468), and Christ Disputing with the Doctors in the Temple in the Museo e Real Bosco di Capodimonte, Naples (inv. no. Q 1681; G. Porzio, op. cit., 2014, pp. 25-26, 35-37; idem, op. cit., 2022, pp. 89-99). In his tightly cropped compositions, with figures crowded into the foreground, and pronounced chiaroscuro, Glielmo was clearly familiar with the paintings of Caravaggio and his southern followers. His works also reveal an awareness of the young Jusepe de Ribera and Giovanni Bernardino Azzolino.
We are extremely grateful to Giuseppe Porzio for generously sharing the above literature references.
We are extremely grateful to Giuseppe Porzio for generously sharing the above literature references.
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