|
|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
This beautiful publication accompanies an exhibition at the Morgan
Library & Museum of the work of Giovanni Battista Piranesi
(1720–1778). It is the most important study of Piranesi’s
drawings to appear in more than a generation. In a letter written
near the end of his life, Giovanni Battista Piranesi explained to
his sister that he had lived away from his native Venice because he
could find no patrons there willing to support “the sublimity of
my ideas.” He resided instead in Rome, where he became
internationally famous working as a printmaker, designer,
architect, archaeologist, theorist, dealer, and polemicist. While
Piranesi’s lasting fame is based above all on his etchings, he
was also an intense, accomplished, and versatile draftsman, and
much of his work was first developed in vigorous drawings. The
Morgan Library& Museum holds what is arguably the largest and
most important collection of these works, more than 100 drawings
that include early architectural caprices, studies for prints,
measured design drawings, sketches for a range of decorative
objects, a variety of figural drawings, and views of Rome and
Pompeii. These works form the core of the book, which will be
published on the occasion of the Morgan’s Spring 2023 exhibition
of Piranesi drawings. More than merely an exhibition catalogue or a
study of the Morgan’s Piranesi holdings, however, this
publication is a monograph that offers a complete survey of
Piranesi’s work as a draftsman. It includes discussion of
Piranesi’s drawings in public and private collections worldwide,
with particular attention paid to the large surviving groups of
drawings in New York, Berlin, Hamburg, and London; it also puts the
large newly discovered cache of Piranesi material in Karlsruhe in
context. The most comprehensive study of Piranesi’s drawings to
appear in more than a generation, the book includes more than 200
illustrations, and while focused on the drawings it offers insights
on Piranesi’s print publications, his church of Santa Maria del
Priorato, and his work as a designer and dealer. In sum, the
present work offers a new account of Piranesi’s life and work,
based on the evidence of his drawings.
For nearly a century, members of three generations of the Bibiena
family were the most highly sought theater designers in Europe.
Their elaborate stage designs were used for operas, festivals, and
courtly performances across Europe: from their native Italy to
cites as far afi eld as Vienna, Prague, Stockholm, St. Petersburg,
and Lisbon. Beyond these performances, the distinctive Bibiena
style survives through their remarkable drawings. Architecture,
Theater, and Fantasy marks the promised gift to the Morgan
Library& Museum of a group of Bibiena drawings from the
collection of Jules Fisher, the Tony Award-winning lighting
designer, and commemorates an exhibition of these works, the first
in the United States in over thirty years to celebrate these
talented draftsmen. These drawings demonstrate the range of the
Bibienas' output, from energetic sketches to highly finished
watercolors. With representations of imagined palace interiors and
lavish illusionistic architecture, this group of drawings
highlights the visual splendor of the Baroque stage. The catalogue
opens with Diane Kelder's introductory essay about the Bibiena
family. Laurel Peterson then discusses the Bibienas as draftsmen,
underscoring the drawings from the Fisher collection. Arnold
Aronson, in turn, explores the family's contribution to the
theater, setting them within a history of European stage design and
explaining the significance of the dynamic angled perspective of
their scena per angolo sets. John Marciari's essay considers the
Fisher gift among the many Bibiena drawings already at the Morgan,
mainly from the Oenslager collection, and looks at the collecting
of Bibiena drawings more generally. Finally, Diane Kelder's
checklist off ers information regarding the attribution and
provenance of the works in the exhibition.
Jacopo Tintoretto (1518/19-1594) was among the most distinctive
artists of the Italian Renaissance. Yet, although his bold
paintings are immediately recognizable, his drawings remain
unfamiliar even to many scholars. Drawing in Tintoretto's Venice
offers a complete overview of Tintoretto as a draftsman. It begins
with a look at drawings by Tintoretto's precedents and
contemporaries, a discussion intended to illuminate Tintoretto's
sources as well as his originality, and also to explore the
historiographical and critical questions that have framed all
previous discussion of Tintoretto's graphic work. Subsequent
chapters explore Tintoretto's evolution as a draftsman and the role
that drawings played in his artistic practice-both preparatory
drawings for his paintings and the many studies after sculptures by
Michelangelo and others-thus examining the use of drawings within
the studio as well as teaching practices in the workshop. Later
chapters focus on the changes to Tintoretto's style as he undertook
ever larger commissions and accordingly began to manage a growing
number of assistants, with special attention paid to Domenico
Tintoretto, Palma Giovane, and other artists whose drawing style
was infl uenced by their time working with the master. The book is
published in conjunction with the exhibition Drawing in
Tintoretto's Venice, opening at the Morgan Library& Museum, New
York, in 2018 and travelling to the National Gallery of Art,
Washington, in early 2019. All of the drawings in the exhibition
are discussed and illustrated, and a checklist of the exhibition is
also included in the volume, but the book is a far more widely
ranging account of Tintoretto's drawings and a comprehensive
account of his work as a draftsman.
Accompanying an exhibition of drawings by Guercino from the
collection of the Morgan Library & Museum, Guercino: Virtuoso
Draftsman offers an overview of the artist's graphic work, ranging
from his early genre studies and caricatures, to the dense and
dynamic preparatory studies for his paintings, and on to highly
finished chalk drawings and landscapes that were ends in
themselves. Giovanni Francesco Barbieri, known as Guercino
(1591-1666), was arguably the most interesting and diverse
draftsman of the Italian Baroque era, a natural virtuoso who
created brilliant drawings in a broad range of media. The Morgan
owns more than twenty-five works by the artist, and these are the
subject of a focused exhibition, supplemented by a handful of loans
from public and private New York collections, to be held at the
Morgan in the autumn of 2019. This volume accompanies that
exhibition. It includes an introductory essay on Guercino's work as
a draftsman followed by entries on the Guercino drawings in the
Morgan's collection. These include sheets from all moments of the
artist's career. His early awareness of the work of the Carracci in
Bologna is documented by figures drawn from everyday life as well
as brilliant caricatures; two drawings for Guercino's own drawing
manual are further testament to his interest in questions of
academic practice. Following his career, a range of preparatory
drawings includes studies made in connection with his earliest
altarpieces as well as his mature masterpieces, including multiple
studies for several projects, allowing the visitor to see
Guercino's mind at work as he reconsidered his ideas. The Morgan's
holdings also include studies for engravings as well as highly
finished landscape and figure drawings that were independent works.
Guercino: Virtuoso Draftsman continues a series of exhibition
catalogues focused on highlights from the Morgan's collection.
Previous volumes include Power and Grace: Drawings by Rubens, Van
Dyck, and Jordaens and Thomas Gainsborough: Experiments in Drawing,
also published by Paul Holberton. While some of the Morgan's
Guercino drawings are well known, they have never been exhibited or
published as a group, and the selection includes a number of new
acquisitions.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R367
R340
Discovery Miles 3 400
|