GIOVANNI BATTISTA PIRANESI (1720-1778)
GIOVANNI BATTISTA PIRANESI (1720-1778)
GIOVANNI BATTISTA PIRANESI (1720-1778)
GIOVANNI BATTISTA PIRANESI (1720-1778)
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GIOVANNI BATTISTA PIRANESI (1720-1778)

A standing Man seen from behind, one Knee resting on a Ledge

Details
GIOVANNI BATTISTA PIRANESI (1720-1778)
A standing Man seen from behind, one Knee resting on a Ledge
a series of mathematical calculations in brown ink (verso)
pen and brown ink, with traces of red chalk (possibly offset from another sheet), on paper
5 ¾ x 4 7⁄8 in. (14.6 x 12.5 cm.)
Provenance
Jacques Petithory (1929-1992), Paris (L. 4138).
Artemis Fine Arts, London, in 1993.
Trinity Fine Art, London.
Artur Ramon, Barcelona.
Artemis Fine Arts, London.
Anonymous sale; Piasa, Paris, 19 June 2003, lot 24.
Anonymous sale; Aguttes, Paris, 18 June 2018, lot 454.
Acquired at the above sale.
Literature
L. Wolk-Simon and C. C. Bambach, An Italian Journey. Drawings from the Tobey Collection. Correggio to Tiepolo, exh. cat., New York, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2010, p. 219, under no. 69, ill.
Exhibited
New York, Trinity Fine Art at Newhouse Galleries, An Exhibition of Old Master Drawings and European Works of Art, 1994, no. 26, ill..
Barcelona, Sala d’Art Artur Ramon, Raíz del Arte II. Una exposición de dibujos antiguos (Siglos XVI al XIX), 1996, no. 11, ill..

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Leo Webster
Leo Webster Specialist

Lot Essay

Giovanni Battista Piranesi was a prolific draughtsman, but figure studies account for a relatively small portion of his graphic output. Rapid, informal sketches like the present one were neither academic exercises nor preparatory studies, as very few were ever translated directly into Piranesi’s prints, although his views of ancient and modern Rome are often populated with figures closely akin to those seen in these drawings.

These figure studies seem to be the working of a restless hand and a curious mind, a sort of artistic tinkering as Piranesi constantly sketched those before him. An early biography of the artist, written by Jacques Guillaume Legrand before 1799, remarked that Piranesi regularly carried with him paper and chalk and drew constantly in his spare time. As noted by Hylton Thomas, Piranesi’s figure studies invariably depict figures in movement, as it was the human figure in action, rather than the human body per se, that most interested the artist (H. Thomas, The Drawings of Giovanni Battista Piranesi, New York, 1954, p. 26). For these quick sketches Piranesi often employed discarded scraps of paper: on the verso of the present sheet are mathematical calculations.

A comparable sketch in pen and ink of a man in a waistcoat kneeling is in a private collection in New York (Wolk-Simon and Bambach, op. cit., no. 69, ill.). The present sheet has been dated by Andrew Robison to the first half of the 1760s.

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