Crocker Art Museum
October 29, 2017 – February 4, 2018
This fall, the Crocker Art Museum brings to Sacramento an exhibition of master drawings by two of 18th-century Italy’s most famous draftsmen, the father and son Giambattista and Domenico Tiepolo. Masters of Venice: Drawings by Giambattista and Domenico Tiepolo from the Anthony J. Moravec Collection
offers an engaging experience of luminous compositions, as the
Tiepolos’ splendid drawings — and the works of other Venetian artists —
provide a unique view into the distinctive art of Italy’s lagoon city.
On view from October 29, 2017 – February 4, 2018, Masters of Venice
provides new insight into two of the city's most important artists.
Eighteenth-century Venice was not only home to a lively community of
artists and the finest publishing and printmaking industry in Europe,
but its unique architecture and traditions also made it a cultural
destination for artists, aristocrats, and royalty. Giambattista Tiepolo
(1696–1770) and his son Domenico (1727–1804) were the most renowned
Venetian artists during this period, with patrons across Italy and
Europe.
In 2010, Indiana businessman and philanthropist Anthony J.
Moravec donated a collection of drawings by the Tiepolos to Indiana
University’s Sidney and Lois Eskenazi Museum of Art in Bloomington,
expanding its Tiepolo holding to make it the third largest in the
nation.
The centerpiece of the exhibition is a group of 12 drawings from
Domenico Tiepolo’s New Testament cycle, from what is believed to be the
largest such cycle produced by a single artist. These large, ink and
wash drawings are not studies for other works, but rather unique designs
that showcased the artist’s deep understanding of the religious subject
matter and his careful observation of the world around him. While most
of the events from the New Testament are familiar, others are more
rarely depicted, yet even in the most iconic scenes, Domenico brings out
the humanity of the story.
“Domenico Tiepolo was an extraordinary storyteller,” says Crocker
Art Museum Curator William Breazeale. “His talent for bringing together
faith and inventive composition is apparent throughout his religious
drawings.”
While Domenico’s New Testament series shows scenes of devout
prayer, swooping angels, the penitent faithful, and a menacing Satan,
the artist also ventures into lively mythological drawings of centaurs,
and his most famous series, scenes of Punchinello. Drawn from the
characters in the popular theater, the commedia dell’arte, the series shows Punchinello as an everyman, dancing and stumbling through life’s celebrations and tragedies.
Although the collector of these works focused largely on
Domenico’s work, it is not surprising that he also acquired excellent
examples by the artist’s father, Giambattista Tiepolo. One of the most
productive 18th-century artists, Giambattista — assisted by Domenico —
frescoed enormous palaces, in addition to producing narrative paintings,
etchings, and a large number of drawings. Giambattista Tiepolo was
particularly talented at capturing gleaming contrasts of light in all
his works, using washes to define textures in his scenes as well as his
famous caricatures.
“Perhaps because of the unusual light in the lagoon city — with
its bright reflections and deep shadows — he created shimmering, glowing
drawings with abundant warm brown washes,” says Breazeale. “In the Flight into Egypt,
for example, he depicts the Holy Family leading a braying donkey past a
grove of barren trees, and creates a remarkable experience of light and
shade as he defines the landscape and figures with varying patches of
wash.”
Along with the drawings by the Tiepolos, Masters of Venice
includes drawings by their predecessors and contemporaries, including
Ubaldo Gandolfi and Giuseppe Bernardino Bison. A selection of 12
Venetian drawings from the Crocker's permanent collection accompanies
the exhibition, expanding our view of the city's rich artistic
tradition.
This exhibition is organized by The Sidney and Lois Eskenazi
Museum of Art at Indiana University.
It is accompanied by a full-color catalogue by Adelheid Gealt, director and curator of Western art emerita
at the Eskenazi Museum of Art, with contributions by the late George
Knox, an authority on Venetian art. The catalogue includes works by the
Tiepolos that are published for the first time.
Giambattista
Tiepolo, The Flight into Egypt ,
1735-40. Pen and brown ink, brush and
brown wash over traces of black chalk on cream laid paper, 41 .1 x 29.8 cm (16 3/16 x 11 11/16 inches).
Eskenazi Museum o f Art, The Anthony
Moravec Collection of Old Master Drawings 2010.134
Domenico Tiepolo, Jesus in the Garden of Gesthemane: The Second
Prayer , n.d. Pen and brown ink, brush
and brown washes on cream laid p aper, 48.2 x 38.0 cm (19 x 15 inches). Eskenazi Museum of
Art, The Ant hony Moravec Collection of
Old Master Drawings 2010.118
Domenico
Tiepolo, A Centaur Playing with
Punchinellos , n.d. Pen and brown ink,
brush and brown washes over traces of black chalk on cream laid paper, 35.9
x 47.5 cm (14 1/8 x 18 11/16 inches). Eskenazi Museum of Art, The Anthony Moravec Collection of Old Master
Drawings 2010.129
Jacopo Palma il
Giovane, Study for Saint John the
Baptist Preaching , circa 1620. Pen and
brown ink, brush and brown washes on cream laid pap er, 29.5 x 25.7 cm (14 15/16 x 13 1/2 inches. Eskenazi
Museum of Art, The Anthony Moravec Collection of Old Master Drawings
2010.128
Domenico Tiepolo, Anna meets Joachim at the Golden Gate , n.d.
Pen and brown ink, brush and brown
washes over black chalk, 19 1/15 x 14
7/8 in., Eskenazi Museum of Art, Indiana
University, The Anthony Moravec Collection of Old Master Drawings, 2010.111
Press images/captions list: https://www.dropbox.com/sh/gmo0ebu3au96rj1/AABBNYX...