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Christmas Cantata (2019) 2
I. Come, O Come, Emmanuel (intro) (Numbers 24:17) Words of hope sustained God’s chosen people as they awaited the promised Messiah. (Numbers 24:17) A star will come out of Jacob; a scepter will rise out of Israel. “The Creation of Adam” - Michelangelo (1512) O come, O come, Emmanuel, "The Creation of Eve” - Michelangelo (1508-1512) And ransom captive Israel, "The Fall of Adam" - Michelangelo (1508-1512) That mourns in lonely exile here "The Expulsion From Paradise" - Michelangelo (1508-1512) Until the Son of God appear. "Labors of Adam and Eve" - Alonso Cano (1650) O come, Thou Dayspring, come and cheer "Cain and Abel" - Tintoretto (1550) our spirits by Thine Advent here; "The Lamentation of Abel” Pieter Lastman (1623) and drive away the shades of night, "Cain Flees" - William Blake (1825) and pierce the clouds and bring us light! Rejoice, Rejoice! Emmanuel shall come to thee, O Israel! (interlude) "The Flood” - J.M.W. Turner (1804) The King shall come when morning dawns “God’s Promise” Joseph Anton Koch (1803) and light triumphant breaks; “ God’s Covenant with Abram” Byzantine (6th Century) When beauty gilds the eastern hills “Jacob’s Dream” Lo Spangnoletto (1639) and life to joy awakes. ”Joseph Sold into Slavery" - Damiano Mascagni (1602) The King shall come when morning dawns ”Joseph Saves Egypt" – Bartholomeus Breenbergh (1644)) and earth’s dark night is past; “Hebrews Make Bricks” Tomb (1440 BC) O haste the rising of that morn, “Burning Bush” – Sebastien Bourdon (17th cent.) the day that e’er shall last. “Crossing of the Red Sea” Come, Emmanuel; “Israelites led by Pillar of Light” – William West (1845) Come, Emmanuel; “Israelites led by Pillar of Fire” The Morning Star shall soon arise, O Come, Emmanuel. -
No, Not Caravaggio
2 SEPTEMBER2018 I valletta 201 a NO~ NOT CARAVAGGIO Crowds may flock to view Caravaggio's Beheading of StJohn another artist, equally talented, has an even a greater link with-Valletta -Mattia Preti. n 1613, in the small town of Taverna, in Calabria, southern Italy, a baby boy was born who would grow up to I become one of the world's greatest and most prolific artists of his time and to leave precious legacies in Valletta and the rest of Malta. He is thought to have first been apprenticed to Giovanni Battista Caracciolo, who was known as a follower and admirer of Caravaggio. His brother, Gregorio, was also a painter and painted an altarpiece for the Chapel of . the world designed and built by Preti, sometime in the 1620s Preti joined.him in the Langue of Aragon, Preti offered to do and no fewer than seven of his paintings Rome. · more wor1< on the then new and very, hang within it. They include the There he grasped Caravaggio's bareSt John's Co-Cathedral. Grand monumental titular painting and others techniques and those of other famous Master Raphael Cotoner accepted his which fit perfectly in the architecturally and popular artists of the age, including offer·and commissioned him to decorate designed stone alcoves he created for Rubens and Giovanni Lanfranco. the whole vaulted ceiling. The them. Preti spent time in Venice between 1644 magnificent scenes from the life of St In keeping with the original need for and 1646 taking the chance to observe the John took six years and completely the church, the saints in the images are all opulent Venetian styles and palettes of transformed the cathedral. -
Gallery Baroque Art in Italy, 1600-1700
Gallery Baroque Art in Italy, 1600-1700 The imposing space and rich color of this gallery reflect the Baroque taste for grandeur found in the Italian palaces and churches of the day. Dramatic and often monumental, this style attested to the power and prestige of the individual or institution that commissioned the works of art. Spanning the 17th century, the Baroque period was a dynamic age of invention, when many of the foundations of the modern world were laid. Scientists had new instruments at their disposal, and artists discovered new ways to interpret ancient themes. The historical and contemporary players depicted in these painted dramas exhibit a wider range of emotional and spiritual conditions. Artists developed a new regard for the depiction of space and atmosphere, color and light, and the human form. Two major stylistic trends dominated the art of this period. The first stemmed from the revolutionary naturalism of the Roman painter, Caravaggio, who succeeded in fusing intense physical observations with a profound sense of drama, achieved largely through his chiaroscuro, or use of light and shadow. The second trend was inspired by the Bolognese painter, Annibale Carracci, and his school, which aimed to temper the monumental classicism of Raphael with the optical naturalism of Titian. The expressive nature of Carracci and his followers eventually developed into the imaginative and extravagant style known as the High Baroque. The Docent Collections Handbook 2007 Edition Niccolò de Simone Flemish, active 1636-1655 in Naples Saint Sebastian, c. 1636-40 Oil on canvas Bequest of John Ringling, 1936, SN 144 Little documentation exists regarding the career of Niccolò de Simone. -
Colnaghistudiesjournal Journal-01
EDITORIAL COMMITTEE Charles Avery Art Historian specializing in European Xavier F. Salomon Peter Jay Sharp Chief Curator, The Frick Sculpture, particularly Italian, French and English. Collection, New York. Colin Bailey Director, Morgan Library and Museum, New York. Salvador Salort-Pons Director, President & CEO, Detroit Francesca Baldassari Art Historian. Institute of Arts. Piers Baker-Bates Visiting Research Associate in Art History, Jack Soultanian Conservator, The Metropolitan Museum of Colnaghi Studies Journal is produced biannually by the Colnaghi Foundation. Its purpose is Art, New York. The Open University. to publish texts on significant pre-twentieth-century artworks in the European tradition Bruce Boucher Director, Sir John Soane’s Museum, London. Nicola Spinosa Former Director of Museo di Capodimonte, Naples. that have recently come to light or about which new research is underway, as well as Till-Holger Borchert Director, Musea Brugge. Carl Strehlke Adjunct Emeritus, Philadelphia Museum of Art. on the history of their collection. Texts about artworks should place them within the Antonia Boström Keeper of Sculpture, Metalwork, Ceramics Holly Trusted Senior Curator of Sculpture, Victoria & Albert broader context of the artist’s oeuvre, provide visual analysis and comparative images. & Glass, Victoria & Albert Museum, London. Museum, London. Edgar Peters Bowron Former Audrey Jones Beck Curator of Manuscripts may be sent at any time and will be reviewed by members of the journal’s Benjamin van Beneden Director, Rubenshuis, Antwerp. European Art, The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Editorial Committee, composed of specialists on painting, sculpture, architecture, Mark Westgarth Programme Director and Lecturer in Art History Xavier Bray Director, The Wallace Collection, London. -
Mediterraneo in Chiaroscuro. Ribera, Stomer E Mattia Preti Da Malta a Roma Mostra a Cura Di Sandro Debono E Alessandro Cosma
Mediterraneo in chiaroscuro. Ribera, Stomer e Mattia Preti da Malta a Roma mostra a cura di Sandro Debono e Alessandro Cosma Roma, Gallerie Nazionali di Arte Antica di Roma - Palazzo Barberini 12 gennaio 2017 - 21 maggio 2017 COMUNICATO STAMPA Le Gallerie Nazionali di Arte Antica di Roma presentano dal 12 gennaio a 21 maggio 2017 nella sede di Palazzo Barberini Mediterraneo in chiaroscuro. Ribera, Stomer e Mattia Preti da Malta a Roma, a cura di Sandro Debono e Alessandro Cosma. La mostra raccoglie alcuni capolavori della collezione del MUŻA – Mużew Nazzjonali tal-Arti (Heritage Malta) de La Valletta di Malta messi a confronto per la prima volta con celebri opere della collezione romana. La mostra è il primo traguardo di una serie di collaborazioni che le Gallerie Nazionali di Arte Antica di Roma hanno avviato con i più importanti musei internazionali per valorizzare le rispettive collezioni e promuoverne la conoscenza e lo studio. In particolare l’attuale periodo di chiusura del museo maltese, per la realizzazione del nuovo ed innovativo progetto MUŻA (Mużew Nazzjonali tal-Arti, Museo Nazionale delle Arti), ha permesso di avviare un fruttuoso scambio che ha portato a Roma le opere in mostra, mentre approderanno sull’isola altrettanti dipinti provenienti dalle Gallerie Nazionali in occasione di una grande esposizione nell’ambito delle iniziative relative a Malta, capitale europea della cultura nel 2018. In mostra diciotto dipinti riprendono l’intensa relazione storica e artistica intercorsa tra l’Italia e Malta a partire dal Seicento, quando prima Caravaggio e poi Mattia Preti si trasferirono sull’isola come cavalieri dell’ordine di San Giovanni (Caravaggio dal 1606 al 1608, Preti per lunghissimi periodi dal 1661 e vi morì nel 1699), favorendo la progressiva apertura di Malta allo stile e alle novità del Barocco romano. -
New Light on Mattia and Gregorio Preti
ENGLISH NEW LIGHT ON MATTIA AND GREGORIO PRETI The restoration of the Allegory of the Five Senses THE RESTORATION OF THE ALLEGORY OF THE FIVE SENSES BY GREGORIO AND MATTIA PRETI Alessandro Cosma, Yuri Primarosa A painter aged around forty, with the tools of his trade in his hand, turns to- wards us with aristocratic condescension, almost as if inviting us to partici- pate in the cheerful symposium taking place behind him (Fig. 1). His facial features and grooming – black hair, olive complexion, ruddy cheeks and thick dark handlebar moustache – are reminiscent of early 17th-century Calabria, which the brothers Gregorio and Mattia Preti had left at the start of the Bar- berini papacy (1623-1644) to seek their fortunes in the Papal capital. The artist, spectator and creator of the allegorical scene, should probably be identified as Gregorio Preti (Taverna 1603 - Rome 1672). He has depicted him- self aged around forty, wearing an ample blue-grey surcoat at a time when he could still be considered to hold a pre-eminent position in the manage- ment of the family workshop. Beneath the repaintings and adjustments made during its execution, the X-ray images of the canvas show the presence of an older looking face, with a fairly pronounced receding hairline, a large double chin and marked wrinkles around the eyes and on the forehead (Fig. 2): this appearance is difficult to reconcile with that of the younger and more talented Mattia (Taverna 1613 - Malta 1699), who was barely thirty at the time. Fig. 1 – GREGORIO AND MATTIA PRETI, Allegory of the Five Senses, detail of the self-portrait of Gregorio Preti Fig. -
Mattia Preti - Architetto Della Sacra Religione Di Malta
7 Mattia Preti - Architetto della Sacra Religione di Malta Denis De Lucca - University of Malta Note: This paper was presented at a scholarly conference organized by the International Institute for Baroque Studies at the University of Malta in association with the Soprintendenza PSAE del Lazio and the Comune di Valmontone. Entitled ‘Sotto la volta dell’aria: Mattia Preti. approfondimenti e ricerche.’ This conference was held at Palazzo Pamphilj in Valmontone outside Rome where, Monday 3rd November 2013, a distinguished international gathering of academics and restoration experts addressed various historical, artistic and technical aspects of Preti’s work, to commemorate the 400th centenary of the birth of the artist. The ‘volta dell’aria’ incorporated in the title of the conference manifesto refers to the restored ceiling fresco of the hall where the event took place, painted in the spring of 1661 by Mattia Preti (1613-1699) for Prince Camillo Francesco Maria Pamphilj (1622-1666) who was, at one time, the general of the Papal armies. The mountains and hills of Calabria have contributed several illustrious personalities who have collectively enriched the turbulent history of mankind. Among these one can mention eighteen Saints of the Catholic Church including Saint Francesco de Paola [1416- 1507]; six popes and, for good measure, one medieval antipope John XVI [945-1001]; King Roger II [1130-1154] and Prince Bohemond of Antioch [1058-1111]; the renegade Ottoman admiral and ruler of Tunis Uluy Ali Pasha, the ‘Occhiali’ who had participated in the great siege of Malta and the battle of Lepanto [1519-1587]; the famous philosophers 8 Denis De Lucca Bernardino Telesio [1509-1588] and Tommaso Campanella [1538- 1639]; the astronomer Aloisio Lilius [1510-1576]; Prince Gregorio Carafa who was a Grand Master of the Religion of Malta [1680- 1690] and, in the post-Baroque age, the Futurist painter Umberto Boccioni [1882-1916] and the world famous designer Gianni Versace [1946-1997]. -
05.Testo Di V. Sgarbi
Vittorio Sgarbi Gli effetti speciali di Mattia Preti nel gran teatro del mondo: l'artista calabrese enfatizza la lezione di Caravaggio e realizza opere spettacolari Caravaggio è come un diamante purissimo. E ogni sua opera mostra una sintesi assoluta rispetto ai soggetti che affronta. È questo che lo rende un pittore di pensiero del tutto alieno da rappresentazioni teatrali anche nei momenti di maggiore tentazione come nelle Sette opere di Misericordia a Napoli o nella Decollazione del Battista alla Valletta. In Caravaggio anche la scenografia è essenziale, inevitabile, come si vede nella Morte della Vergine . Nessuno lo intende meglio di Mattia Preti, il grande pittore calabrese che proprio da Caravaggio riparte nello stesso momento in cui la sua parabola declina e finisce la febbre che aveva contagiato tutta l'Europa pittorica. Nel 1632 Mattia è a Roma e insieme al fratello Gregorio lavora in una bottega di pittori marchigiani. Ben presto, forse già negli anni appena successivi, inizia a sbarazzarsi dei teatrini del fratello, meno dotato. In quegli anni tutto accadeva a Roma e il giovane artista si misurava con i maestri che avevano inaugurato il secolo. Mattia sembra non seguire mode né tendenze ed è guidato da un'ansia di semplificazione come per un ritorno alle origini, cercando di realizzare quel punto di fusione tra Giorgione e Caravaggio, cui fanno riferimento alcune fonti. Ne è prova evidente, nella sua purezza, il Concerto di San Pietroburgo. Mattia non ha dubbi: riesce a ricreare uno schema di Caravaggio con assoluta semplicità e senza devozione. Mai, anche nei momenti di più alta spiritualità, Mattia Preti sarà un pittore devoto. -
Download Gallery Guide
For a large print version, please ask a member of staff Naples 1600-1800 Compton Verney This leaflet is available to download at www.comptonverney.org.uk 1 & 2. Giuseppe Bonito (1707-1789), Italian: The Poet and The Music Lesson. Oil on canvas, AUSTRIA HUNGARY about 1742. Both 101.5 x 154 cm SWITZERLAND SLOVENIA Giuseppe Bonito studied with the CROATIA influential Neapolitan artist Francesco Solimena (1657-1747) and was admired for his everyday life or I A ‘genre’ scenes, which date primarily from the 1740s. Bonito’s D T R I A innovative subject matter reflected the changing tastes of his T A I C S patrons. This pair of paintings, recently reunited, represent a CORSICA E L A cross section of Neapolitan society. The poet is a Bohemian figure TYRRHENIAN Y surrounded by an admiring audience, one of whom engages SEA the viewer with a sidelong glance. The elegant garments of the SARDINIA figures in The Music Lesson are emphasised through a rich colour IONIAN SEA palette and strong contrast between light and shade. Bonito SICILY uses dynamic poses and multiple figures in the compositions to contribute to the atmosphere of daily life. Naples MEDITERRANEAN SEA Pozzuoli Mount Riviera di Chiaia Vesuvius Posillipo Herculaneum 3. Bernardo Cavallino (1616-56), Italian: Pompeii The Flight into Egypt. Oil on canvas, about 1640-50. 76.8 x 63.5 cm Salerno The flight into Egypt is briefly narrated by St Matthew in the second chapter of his gospel: warned by an angel that King Herod had ordered all infants in Bethlehem to be killed, Joseph ‘rose and took the child and his mother by night, and departed into Egypt’. -
Preti-Cananea Dossier
Gallerie Nazionali Barberini Corsini Direttrice Flaminia Gennari Santori LA CANANEA RESTAURATA Nuove scoperte su Mattia e Gregorio Preti Roma, Palazzo Barberini 19 novembre 2020 – 2 maggio 2021 Mostra a cura di Alessandro Cosma, Yuri Primarosa DUE CALABRESI A ROMA Nella primavera del 1632, quando guida e di “procacciatore di commesse”, introducendo Mattia è documentato per la prima volta a Roma assieme a suo fratello nei circuiti del mercato e dei collezionisti, e nelle grazie di po- Gregorio (1603-1672), Mattia Preti (1613-1699) era un giovane tenti famiglie romane come i Barberini, i Rospigliosi e i Colonna. di belle speranze e qualche fortuna, innamorato dei grandi del Ricorda a questo proposito Sebastiano Resta (1635-1714) che suo tempo: Caravaggio, Ribera, Lanfranco e Guercino. Probabil- Gregorio «per tirarlo avanti e mantenerlo alla pittura si mise mente i due calabresi erano giunti nella città papale dalla natia anche a lavorare per bottegari, che allora erano ricchi»: una Taverna – piccolo borgo alle pendici della Sila – già nel 1624, testimonianza importante che mette in evidenza l’attenzione in tempo per assistere agli ultimi bagliori della pittura cara- riservata dal fratello maggiore alla formazione di Mattia. vaggesca e ai primi fuochi di quella barocca. Nei due decenni successivi, del resto, il linguaggio caravaggesco e i suoi temi IL TALENTO E IL MESTIERE Del resto, quella di Gregorio è una tipici (concerti, buone venture, scene di osteria...) continuarono pittura discontinua nei risultati che mostra spesso inclinazioni a ispirare i due artisti: uno sguardo “retrospettivo” che, eviden- culturalmente attardate e che ripropone in più occasioni schemi temente, trovava ancora degli estimatori nella Roma di quegli e modelli precedenti. -
La Vita, La Fortuna Critica, I Capolavori Giuseppe Bonito Nacque A
La vita, la fortuna critica, i capolavori Giuseppe Bonito nacque a Castellammare di Stabia, terzo dei dodici figli di Saverio e di Anastasia Grosso e fu battezzato in quella cattedrale il 2 novembre 1707. Ancora fanciullo, entrò nella bottega di Francesco Solimena che dominava la scena artistica di Napoli. Fu con il Vanvitelli tra i protagonisti della scena artistica napoletana negli anni del regno di Carlo, della reggenza del Tanucci e poi sotto Ferdinando IV, conseguendo incarichi pubblici prestigiosi ed un grande successo tra i committenti. Peppariello diventerà Cavaliere di grazia, pittore di corte, professore dell’Accademia di Belle Arti e direttore a vita della medesima. Una figura che ebbe un ruolo rilevante nel mondo dell’arte ufficiale e non fu immune, come affermava la Lorenzetti, dalla taccia di soverchia invadenza. La critica dell'Ottocento e del primo Novecento ha apprezzato nel Bonito solo il pittore di genere, che come tale avrebbe precorso il realismo e valorizzato le virtù borghesi al contrario, la critica recente riconosce in lui il custode della più schietta tradizione pittorica neoveneta, che ha contribuito a ritardare sino ai limiti del possibile l'avvento del neoclassicismo. Dopo un inizio influenzato dalle esperienze puriste del Solimena, verso la fine degli anni Trenta con le tele (040 - 041) per la chiesa della Graziella a Napoli ed in San Domenico a Barletta (037), muovendo dalla svolta di indirizzo pretiano e dalle ultime tele del Giordano, si orientò verso soluzioni di gusto neo barocco, come si evince chiaramente nella splendida Carità (029) nella sacrestia del Monte di Pietà, eseguita nel 1742 e nel bozzetto(031) per la distrutta decorazione della volta della chiesa di Santa Chiara del 1752. -
The Pennsylvania State University
The Pennsylvania State University The Graduate School Department of Art History THE DOCUMENTED PAINTINGS AND LIFE OF ANDREA VACCARO (1604-1670) A Thesis in Art History by Anna Kiyomi Tuck-Scala Ó 2003 Anna Kiyomi Tuck-Scala Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy December 2003 The thesis of Anna Kiyomi Tuck-Scala was reviewed and approved* by the following: Jeanne Chenault Porter Associate Professor of Art History Thesis Adviser Chair of Committee Roland E. Fleischer Professor Emeritus of Art History George L. Mauner Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Art History Alfred A. Triolo Associate Professor Emeritus of Italian and Spanish Craig Zabel Associate Professor of Art History Head of the Department of Art History *Signatures are on file in the Graduate School iii ABSTRACT This dissertation takes stock of what is known about Andrea Vaccaro (1604- 1670), one of the most prominent painters of Naples in the middle of the seventeenth- century. Although successful during his lifetime, Vaccaro currently suffers a reputation that is, at best, second rate. Due to the hundreds of paintings attributed to Vaccaro of dubious quality, modern art historians characterize his art as “eclectic” and “academic.” The sole monograph on Vaccaro, Maria Commodo Izzo’s Andrea Vacccaro pittore (1604-1670) published in 1951, is also sorely out of date. This study provides a new and more accurate portrayal of the artist. Rather than the customary all-inclusive approach, this study is based on the solid foundation of all known documents about the artist’s life and art, which are gathered and analyzed in one place for the first time.