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The Temptation of St Anthony

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Specifications

Title The Temptation of St Anthony
Material and technique Brown, grey, red and white oilpaint
Object type
Drawing > Two-dimensional object > Art object
Location This object is in storage
Dimensions Height 265 mm
Width 293 mm
Artists Draughtsman: Domenico Tintoretto (Domenico Robusti)
Accession number I 543 (PK)
Credits Loan Stichting Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen (former Koenigs collection), 1940
Department Drawings & Prints
Acquisition date 1940
Creation date in circa 1590-1620
Watermark Unknown, view inhibited by the paint layer and the backing paper ( vV, ?P)
Inscriptions 'Li nave a 3 in Marg / Hle [?]' (verso, top centre, pen and brown ink)
Collector Collector / Franz Koenigs
Mark F.W. Koenigs (L.1023a)
Provenance Franz W. Koenigs (1881-1941, L.1023a), Haarlem, probably acquired in 1929-30; D.G. van Beuningen (1877-1955), Rotterdam, acquired with the Koenigs Collection in 1940 and donated to Stichting Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
Exhibitions Rotterdam 2010 (coll 2 kw 6)
Internal exhibitions De Collectie Twee - wissel VI, Prenten & Tekeningen (2010)
Research Show research Italian Drawings 1400-1600
Literature Tietze/Tietze-Conrat 1944, no. 1516 (D. Tintoretto); Rossi 1999, p. 46 n. 10
Material
Object
Geographical origin Italy > Southern Europe > Europe
Place of manufacture Venice > Veneto region > Italy > Southern Europe > Europe

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Entry catalogue Italian Drawings 1400-1600

Author: Albert Elen

The nucleus of Domenico Tintorettto’s surviving drawings consists of 90 oil sketches on paper, which were acquired by the British Museum in 1907 as a homogeneous group, mounted in a late seventeenth-century collector’s album.[1] This so-called Del Carpio album was subsequently dismembered and the drawings were individually mounted.[2] First believed to be the work of the artist’s father, based on the inscription ‘DISEGNI DE GIACOME TINTORETTO Raccolti in Roma […]’ on the album’s title page, the entire group was recognized as Domenico’s by Von Hadeln (1922, 1926). His attribution was supported by Tozzi Pedrazzi (1937) and by Hans Tietze and Erika Tietze-Conrat, who individually listed them in their handbook of Venetian drawings (1944).[3] At least 24 more drawings belong to the same group, now scattered among print rooms, including four in Rotterdam, all from the Koenigs Collection (I 542-545).[4] The latter four were probably acquired as a set by the collector Koenigs, to judge by his successive inventory numbers, but their provenance is unfortunately unknown. This particular drawing was seriously damaged and the top left and lower right corners have later been repaired and the drawing completed.

Certain subjects in this substantial group of oil sketches appear in many variations, some of which are in reverse, in whole or in part. The subject of our drawing, the temptation of St Anthony, either harassed by women or by beasts, or both, appears most frequently: 35 times in the album alone and also in two other drawings from the Koenigs Collection (I 542, 544).[5] Most are horizontal compositions and a few are squared for transfer to another sheet for further elaboration, like the drawing now in Moscow (I 544). Most of the St Anthony sketches appear to have been made as study material only, exploring various possibilities for depicting this particular subject, only four having been identified as preparatory for a painting.[6]

The composition centres on the hermit saint who, according to the Legenda Aurea and his biography by St Athanasius, had renounced all his worldly goods to live in poverty and seclusion in the desert. He is surrounded by demons, those prominently placed in the foreground disguised as naked women, making the saint tempting offers, the other bystanders harassing him. The kneeling female nude on the left foreground in our drawing, seen from the back, is also found in one of the London drawings, the kneeling saint in exactly the same pose in another.[7] Several of the St Anthony sketches, including ours, have the same seated nude woman on the right, with the bent left leg lowered, the arms clinging to the pulled-up right leg, which rests on one or two cushions, making various gestures in communication with the saint seated or kneeling on the ground between them.[8] The four or five figures standing in the background vary and sometimes include one wearing a crown, as in our drawing I 542.[9]

Footnotes

[1] London, British Museum, inv. 1907,0717.1 to 90. See also the entry for inv. I 542.

[2] The album is occasionally called a sketchbook, including on the British Museum website, which it was not; on the distinction between drawing-books and albums, see Elen 1995 and Elen 2018.

[3] Von Hadeln 1922, p. 16 (rejected attr. Jacopo Tintoretto); Von Hadeln (1926a), pp. 25ff (attr. Domenico); Tietze/Tietze‑Conrat 1944, pp. 263-66, no. 1526 (1-90). See also Marciari 2018, pp. 150-53, figs. 120, 121.

[4] Tietze/Tietze‑Conrat 1944, nos. 1472-77, 1482-83, 1486, 1515-20, 1528, 1530, 1536-37, 1548-51, 1554. The Koenigs Collection held two more drawings from this group, which passed from the collector’s heirs to the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, inv. RP-T-1964-81 and RP-T-1964-82; Amsterdam 1981, nos. 147 and 360 (inv. RP-T-1985-115 is another sheet, from a different source). Our drawing inv. I 544 is one of the 108 missing drawings from the Koenigs Collection, now in Moscow, claimed by the Netherlands (Elen 1989, no. 389, ill.; Moscow 1995, no. 135, ill, pl. on p. 54).

[5] British Museum, inv. 1907,0717.13, 36 and 42 to 74; Rossi 1999, pp. 32-39, figs. 4-14.

[6] Rossi linked four drawings from the Del Carpio album (British Museum, inv. 1907,0717.42, 43, 47 and 53) to a painting The Temptation of St Anthony in the art market in 1982; Rossi (1999), p. 34, fig. 6. Koshikawa connected nine drawings from the Del Carpio album with other subject matter (1907,0717.82-90) to Domenico’s painting Christ Delivering the Keys, now in the Galleria Estense in Modena (1597-1601); Koshikawa (1996), pp. 61-63.

[7] British Museum, inv. 1907,0717.43 and 51 respectively.

[8] Rossi has pointed out that this pose derives from the seated Susanna in two of Jacopo Tintoretto’s paintings from around 1550, one now in a private collection (previously unpublished), the other in the Louvre (Pallucchini/Rossi 1982, no. 144, pl. 91); Rossi 1999, pp. 30-33, figs. 1, 2.

[9] British Museum, inv. 1907,0717.42, 45, 50, 52, 59-62.

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Domenico Tintoretto (Domenico Robusti)

Venetië 1560 - Venetië 1635

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