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Study after an Antique Fountain

Study after an Antique Fountain

Giulio Romano (Giulio Pippi) (in circa 1532-1546)

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Specifications

Title Study after an Antique Fountain
Material and technique Pen and brush and brown ink, brown wash
Object type
Drawing > Two-dimensional object > Art object
Location This object is in storage
Dimensions Height 379 mm
Width 250 mm
Artists Draughtsman: Giulio Romano (Giulio Pippi)
Accession number MB 979 (PK)
Credits Purchased 1930
Department Drawings & Prints
Acquisition date 1930
Creation date in circa 1532-1546
Watermark Ladder in a shield, a ? below
Inscriptions 'J. R' (verso, below right, black chalk), G. Roman / 4 / 3' (verso, pen and brown ink, partly cut off)
Provenance Purchase 1930
Exhibitions Rotterdam 1997-98; Rotterdam 2009 (coll 2 kw 2)
Internal exhibitions Rondom Raphaël (1997)
De Collectie Twee - wissel II, Prenten & Tekeningen (2009)
Research Show research Italian Drawings 1400-1600
Material
Object
Technique
Washing > Wash > Drawing technique > Technique > Material and technique
Washing > Wash > Drawing technique > Technique > Material and technique
Geographical origin Italy > Southern Europe > Europe

Entry catalogue Italian Drawings 1400-1600

Author: Surya Stemerding

A classical Roman statue of Silenus, the teacher of the wine god Bacchus, is on a pedestal pouring water into a large vase from a leather waterskin. The statue and the vase, which is a neo-Attic krater, also called the Vaso Torlonia, are now in Villa Albani in Rome.[1]

The lavish washes create a dramatically heavy contrast that is typical of Giulio Romano’s pen drawings. The free interpretation of the physical statue in Villa Albani is remarkable. Silenus has been elongated, and thus looks less squat and more human. The foliage wreath on his head has been replaced by horns, and his tree-stump support has been omitted. Vinti (1995) had already remarked upon Romano’s repeated and insouciantly free approach to the ‘copying’ of classical sculptures.

The provenance of the Silenus statue, which formed a fountain with the well-known Vaso Torlonia, can be traced back to 1532, when Maarten van Heemskerck (1498-1574) drew it in the garden of Cardinal Paolo Emilio Cesi (1481-1537).[2] The same composition, with the statue on a pedestal beside the vase, can be seen in a drawing by Francisco de Holanda (1517-1585).[3] The composition of the statue and vase was altered at some stage in the 1540s. Ulisse Aldovrandi (1522-1605) described the group in 1550, when it had evidently been given a new central position in the sculpture garden of the Cesi family.[4] His description of a ‘faun’ standing in a vase matches depictions of the group after 1550. A 1581 engraving by Pieter Perret (1555-1625) shows the new constellation,[5] which can also be seen in drawings in the Codex Coburgensis, the Codex Cantabrigensis and a sketch by Willem Panneels (c.1600-1632) after Peter Paul Rubens (1577-1640).[6]

The Cesi collection was dispersed towards the end of the sixteenth century, and for a long time both vase and statue vanished from sight. It was not until the eighteenth century that they were both bought by Cardinal Alessandro Albani (1692-1779). However, a drawing by Joachim von Sandrart (1606-1688), a print of which was made in 1675 by Richard Collin (1626-1698), reveals where the statue of Silenus had been in the seventeenth century.[7] The engraving is part of the Galleria Giustiniana, to which Sandrart contributed, and the inscription above the print states that it was made after the statue in the Roman collection.[8] At that moment statue and vase had evidently not been reunited, and instead the print shows Silenus combined with a reclining lion and installed in a niche.

In Boston there is an identical version of the Rotterdam drawing.[9] While the Rotterdam drawing is attributed to Romano, the Boston version is given to Girolamo da Carpi (1501-1556) on the evidence of its stylistic features.[10] It looks flatter than the Rotterdam sheet due to the less pronounced shadowing. Moreover, it has fewer spontaneous, expressive lines. It is probably a drawing that Da Carpi copied after Giulio Romano, an artist whom he greatly admired and whose work very clearly inspired him.

Footnotes

[1] See Leoncini 1991, pp. 99-116, for more information about the Vaso Torlonia.

[2] Berlin, Staatliche Museen, Kupferstichkabinett, inv. 79 D2, fol. 25r.

[3] Madrid, El Escorial, inv. A/6 e ij 6, fol. 26r. Francisco de Holanda was in Italy between 1538 and 1547.

[4] Aldovrandi 1556, p. 124: ‘Vaso di fonte antico bellissimo con tre pie lavorato di varii sfollaggi: e Virgin è dentro un Fauno in atto di versare acqua da uno otre, che egli si tiene sculpture la coscia’,

[5] Hollstein XVII, p. 52, no. 40. Speculum Romanae Magnificentiae: A Fountain and Basin, 1581.

[6] Corburg, Landesbibliothek, Codex Corburgensis, fol. 189.3; Cambridge, Trinity College, Codex Cantabrigensis, fol. 52; Copenhagen, Kongelige Kobberstiksamling, inv. 204.

[7] Rome, Biblioteca Hertziana, inv. Gh-SAN 1595-2750/1(1 gr raro)

[8] There are two known drawings of the statue by Sandrart, and a third one was sold by Bassenge in Berlin in 2009. The location of the sculpture was repeated in the annotation ‘Il Silenne del Marchese Justiniane’. See Berlin (Bassenge) 27 November 2009, no. 6171. This makes it clear that the statue was in the Giustiniani collection in the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries but was not visible to the public, making its whereabouts uncertain. Joachim von Sandrart, who lodged with his patron Marquis Vincenzo Giustiniani, did have easy access to the collection, and even made a series of drawings of classical sculptures that were published in the Galleria Giustiniani, and partly in his own Teutsche Academie. Rome 2001-02, ill. I 138.

[9] Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum, inv. 1957.188.

[10] A second, anomalous drawing after the fountain by Girolamo da Carpi is in his book of drawings, Philadelphia 2005.

Show research Italian Drawings 1400-1600
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Giulio Romano (Giulio Pippi)

Rome 1492/1499 - Mantua 1546

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