Sunday, November 23, 2014

Beyond Baroque

Christ Child
Genoa
carved and painted wood
c. 1700

St. Joseph Carrying the Christ Child
Naples
creamware
1790s

The Getty Museum collections of Italian art  moving farther into the 18th century. Surfaces are newly prominent  patterning prevails over storytelling.

Sebastiano Ricci
Triumph of the Marine Venus
c. 1713

Marco Ricci
Storm
gouache on leather
c. 1715

Francesco Solimena
Death of Messalina
c. 1708

Sebastiano Ricci
Perseus with the Head of Medusa
c. 1705-10

Giovanni Foggini
Laocoön
bronze
c 1720

Antonio Canova
Apollo Crowning Himself
marble
1781

Antonio Canova
Herm of a Vestal Virgin
marble
1820-21

Antonio Canova (1757-1822) used his Neoclassical  vocabulary to combat the prevailing mania for busy surfaces. Posterity has delivered mixed reviews, some finding his work cold and static, others finding balance and repose.

Apollo was carved when Canova was 24 years old. It was created in Rome, but traveled at an early date to France. The Getty acquired Apollo Crowning Himself  in the early 1990s.

Vestal Virgin was completed when Canova was 63 years old. It was created in Naples and remained there until 1937, subsequently traveling to Switzerland. The Getty acquired Herm of a Vestal Virgin in 1985.