Thursday, May 15, 2025

Narrative Tendencies (1738-1780)

Cornelis Troost
Harlequin, Magician and Barber
(The Rivals Exposed)

1738
pastel and gouache on paper
Mauritshuis, The Hague

Franz Christoph Janneck
The Embarcation for Cythera
ca. 1740
oil on copper
Deutsche Barockgalerie, Augsburg

Jacopo Amigoni
The Encounter of Anthia and Habrocomes
(scene from The Ephesian Tale by Xenophon of Ephesus)
1744
oil on canvas
Staatsgalerie Stuttgart

Henri de Favanne
Parting of Telemachus and Eucharis
(scene from The Adventures of Telemachus by François Fénelon)
ca. 1746
oil on canvas
Musée des Beaux-Arts de Lyon

Gaspare Traversi
The Portrait Session
ca. 1750
oil on canvas
Musée Magnin, Dijon

Pompeo Batoni
Scene of Frenzy
ca. 1760
drawing
National Gallery, Athens

Gabriel de Saint-Aubin
The Death of Tancrède
(scene from Voltaire's verse drama, Tancrède)
ca. 1760
drawing, with added watercolor
Morgan Library, New York

Francesco Bartolozzi after Sebastiano Ricci
Furius Camillus liberating Rome from Brennus
(episode described by Plutarch)
1763
etching printed in two colors
Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh

Jean-Baptiste Greuze
The Father's Curse on the Ungrateful Son
ca. 1765
drawing
Palais des Beaux-Arts de Lille

François Boucher
Boreas abducting Oreithyia
(scene from Ovid's Metamorphoses)
1769
oil on canvas
Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth, Texas

Jacques-Louis David
The Death of Seneca
(scene from the Annals of Tacitus)
1773
oil on canvas
Musée du Petit Palais, Paris

Gaetano Fryer
Lucius Albinus offering his Cart to the Vestal Virgins
(scene from Livy's History of Rome)
1774
oil on canvas
Galleria Nazionale di Parma

Marco Marcola
Scene of Assassination from Ancient History
ca. 1775
drawing
Morgan Library, New York

Jean-Pierre Norblin
The Pierides transformed into Magpies
(scene from Ovid's Metamorphoses)
ca. 1780
oil on canvas
National Museum, Warsaw

Antoine-François Callet
Sacrifice of Polyxena
(scene from Ovid's Metamorphoses)
ca. 1780-83
drawing
Kupferstichkabinett, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin

Then casting up his eyes, he saw before him a rare meadow, and in the midst of it a little Arbour, as he so farre off tooke it to bee, but drawing neerer he found a delicate Fountaine circled about with Orange, and Pomgranet trees, the ground under them all hard sand, about the Fountaine (as next adjoyning) was a hedge of Jesamins mingled with Roses and Woodbines, and within that, paved with pavements of divers colours, plac'd for shew and pleasure; on the steps he sate downe beholding the worke of the Fountaine which was most curious, being a faire Maide as it were, thinking to lade it drie, but still the water came fast, as it past over the dish she seemed to lade withall.  "And just thus," said hee, "are my labours fruitlesse, my woes increasing faster then my paines find ease."  Then having enough, as hee thought, given liberty to his speech, he put the rest of his thought into excellent verse, making such excelling ones, as none could any more imitate or match them, then equall his valour: so exquisite was he in all true vertues, and skill in Poetry, a quallitie among the best much prized and esteemed, Princes brought up in that, next to the use of Armes.

– from The Countesse of Mountgomeries Urania, by the right honourable the Lady Mary Wroath, daughter to the right noble Robert, Earle of Leicester, and neece to the ever famous and renowned Sʳ Phillips Sidney knight, and to ye most excellant Lady Mary Countess of Pembroke, late deceased (London: John Marriott and John Grismand, 1621)