Guercino

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Giovanni Francesco Barbieri (February 8, 1591 – December 22, 1666),[1] better known as (il) Guercino[2] (Script error: No such module "IPA".), was an Italian Baroque painter and draftsman from Cento in the Emilia region, who was active in Rome and Bologna. The vigorous naturalism of his early manner contrasts with the classical equilibrium of his later works. His many drawings are noted for their luminosity and lively style.

Biography

File:Et-in-Arcadia-ego.jpg
The dramatic confrontation with mortality depicted in Guercino's Et in Arcadia ego (c. 1618–1622) marks the first known usage of this Latin motto (inscribed on the plinth beneath the skull).
File:Francesco Barbieri.jpg
This contemporary portrait (1623) by Ottavio Leoni[3] highlights the lifelong squint (a form of strabismus) which prompted the name 'Guercino'.
File:Guercino (Giovanni Francesco Barbieri) - Christ and the Woman of Samaria - Google Art Project.jpg
Caravaggio's influence is apparent in this canvas Christ and the Woman of Samaria (c. 1619–1620).
File:Guercino - The Persian Sibyl - Google Art Project.jpg
Guercino – The Persian Sibyl (1647–48)

Giovanni Francesco Barbieri was born into a family of peasant farmers in Cento, a town in the Po Valley mid-way between Bologna and Ferrara.[4] Being cross-eyed, at an early age he acquired the nickname by which he is universally known, Guercino (a diminutive of the Italian noun Script error: No such module "Lang"., meaning 'squinter').[5] Mainly self-taught, at the age of 16, he worked as apprentice in the shop of Benedetto Gennari, a painter of the Bolognese School.[6] An early commission was for the decoration with frescoes (1615–1616[7]) of Casa Pannini in Cento, where the naturalism of his landscapes already reveals considerable artistic independence, as do his landscapes on canvas Moonlit Landscape and Country Concert from the same era.[8] In Bologna, he won the praise of Ludovico Carracci. He always acknowledged that his early style had been influenced by study of a Madonna painted by Ludovico Carracci for the Capuchin church in Cento, affectionately known as "La Carraccina".[9]

St William Receiving the Monastic Habit (1620, Pinacoteca Nazionale di Bologna, Italy),[10] painted for Santi Gregorio e Siro in Bologna, was Guercino's largest ecclesiastical commission at the time and is considered a high point of his early career.[5]

His painting Et in Arcadia ego from around 1618–1622 contains the first known usage anywhere of the Latin motto, later taken up by Poussin and others, signifying that death lurks even in the most idyllic setting.[11] The dramatic composition of this canvas (related to his Flaying of Marsyas by Apollo (1617–1618[12]) created for Cosimo II de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany, which shares the same pair of shepherds[13]) is typical of Guercino's early works, which are often tumultuous in conception.[14] He painted two large canvases, Samson Seized by Philistines (1619) and Elijah Fed by Ravens (1620), for Cardinal Giacomo Serra, a Papal Legate to Ferrara.[15][16] Painted at a time when it is unlikely that Guercino could have seen Caravaggio's work in Rome, these works nevertheless display a starkly naturalistic Caravaggesque style.

Rome

File:Guercino - The Woman taken in Adultery - Google Art Project.jpg
Guercino – The Woman taken in Adultery, Dulwich Picture Gallery (1621)
File:Guercino Flagellazione.jpg
Guercino – Flagellation of Christ (1657)

Guercino was recommended by Marchese Enzo Bentivoglio to the newly elected Bolognese Ludovisi Pope, Pope Gregory XV in 1621.[17] The years he spent in Rome, 1621–23, were very productive. From this period are his frescoes Aurora at the casino of the Villa Ludovisi, the ceiling in San Crisogono (1622) of San Chrysogonus in Glory, the portrait of Pope Gregory XV (now in the Getty Museum), and the St. Petronilla Altarpiece for St. Peter's Basilica in the Vatican (now in the Capitoline Museums).

Return to Bologna

Following the death of Gregory XV in 1623, Guercino returned to his hometown of Cento. In 1626, he began his frescoes in Piacenza Cathedral. The details of his career after 1629 are well documented in the account book, the Libro dei Conti di Casa Barbieri, that Guercino and his brother Paolo Antonio Barbieri, a notable painter of still lifes, kept updated, and which has been preserved.[18] Between 1618 and 1631, Giovanni Battista Pasqualini produced 67 engravings that document the early production of Guercino, which is not included in the Libro dei Conti.[19] In 1642, following the death of his commercial rival Guido Reni, Guercino moved his busy workshop to Bologna, where he was now able to take over Reni's role as the city's leading painter of sacred subjects. In 1655, the Franciscan Order of ReggioTemplate:Clarify paid him 300 ducats for the altarpiece of Saint Luke Displaying a Painting of the Madonna and Child (now in Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City).[20] The Corsini family also paid him 300 ducats for the Flagellation of Christ painted in 1657.

File:San salvatore, bo, int., tomba del guercino.JPG
Tomb of Guercino, Santissimo Salvatore, Bologna

Style

Guercino was remarkable for the extreme rapidity of his executions: he completed no fewer than 106 large altarpieces for churches, and his other paintings amount to about 144. He was also a prolific draftsman. His production includes many drawings, usually in ink, washed ink, or red chalk. Most of them were made as preparatory studies for his paintings, but he also drew landscapes, genre subjects, and caricatures for his own enjoyment. Guercino's drawings are known for their fluent style in which "rapid, calligraphic pen strokes combined with dots, dashes, and parallel hatching lines describe the forms".[21]

Despite presumably having monocular vision due to a 'lazy' right eye, Guercino showed remarkable facility to imply depth in his works, perhaps assisted by an enhanced perception of light and shade thanks to compensation by the healthy eye.[22] Other artists with different types of strabismus include Rembrandt, Dürer, Degas, Picasso and (possibly) Leonardo da Vinci.[23]

His lively treatment of the Aurora myth (1621, Villa Aurora, Rome, Italy), painted for the pope's nephew, Cardinal Ludovico Ludovisi.[24] challenges the more measured representation of the same subject painted by Guido Reni at Palazzo Rospigliosi on behalf of a Ludovisi family rival Scipione Borghese and makes a statement of political triumph.[25] Some of his later works are closer to the style of Reni, and are painted with much greater luminosity and clarity than his early works with their prominent use of chiaroscuro.

Pupils

Guercino continued to paint and teach until the end of his life, amassing a notable fortune. He died on December 22, 1666, in Bologna.[26] As he never married, his estate passed to his nephews and pupils, Benedetto Gennari II and Cesare Gennari.[5] Other pupils include Giulio Coralli,[27] Giuseppe Bonati of Ferrara,[28] Cristoforo Serra of Cesena,[29] Father Cesare Pronti of Ferrara,[30] Sebastiano Ghezzi,[31] Sebastiano Bombelli,[32] Lorenzo Bergonzoni of Bologna,[33] Francesco Paglia of Brescia.,[34] Benedetto Zallone of Cento, Bartolomeo Caravoglia,[35] Giuseppe Maria Galeppini of Forli, and Matteo Loves.

Works

Exhibitions

A groundbreaking exhibition held at the Archiginnasio of Bologna in 1968 provided the most complete panorama of Guercino's work to date, including paintings from the later parts of his career after the death of Pope Gregory XV, which had previously attracted relatively little attention.[39] For the fourth centenary of the artist's birth in 1991, an expanded exhibition was organized by the Pinacoteca Nazionale di Bologna in conjunction with the Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt and the National Gallery of Art, Washington.[40] Both these exhibitions were curated by Guercino's biggest modern champion, Denis Mahon, who was responsible for their catalogues.[41] In 2011–2012, a large exhibition was displayed at Palazzo Barberini in Rome, dedicated to the memory of Mahon, who had recently died.[42] An exhibition displayed at the National Museum, Warsaw in 2013–2014 offered another extensive presentation of the artist's work.[43] In 2019-2010 the Morgan Library & Museum held of an exhibit of his drawings titled, Guercino: Virtuoso Draftsman.[44]  A catalog was published in conjunction with the exhibit.

Citations

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References

Books and articles on Guercino
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  • Marciari, John (2019).  Guercino: Virtuoso Draftsman. New York, NY : The Morgan Library & Museum. Template:ISBN
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Further reading

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External links

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  1. Miller, 1964
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  4. a b Mahon, 1937a
  5. a b c Turner, 2003
  6. Griswold 1991, p. 6
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  8. Stone, pp. 3, 37.
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  14. Griswold 1991, p. 13
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  16. Vivian, 1971
  17. Lawrence Gowing, ed., Biographical Encyclopedia of Artists, v.2 (Facts on File, 2005): 291.
  18. Griswold 1991, p. 35
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  21. Griswold 1991, p. 36
  22. Scholtz et al, 2019
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  24. Vodret and Gozzi, 2011, pp. 159–161
  25. Unger, 2016, p. 9; Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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  27. Orlandi, 1719, p. 207
  28. Orlandi, p. 207
  29. Orlandi, p. 120.
  30. Orlandi, p. 350.
  31. Orlandi, p. 399
  32. Orlandi, p. 397.
  33. Orlandi, p. 294.
  34. Orlandi, p. 171
  35. Lanzi, 1847, pp. 309–310
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  39. a b Posner, 1968
  40. Mahon, 1992, p. 7
  41. van Serooskerken, 1991
  42. Vodret and Gozzi, 2011
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