Saturday, April 16, 2016

17th-century Italian drawings from the British Museum

Salvator Rosa
Woman seated on a bank
1640s
drawing
British Museum

Salvator Rosa made the drawing above during a relatively serene period in the 1640s when he had settled in Florence to serve the Medici. The artist's restless romanticism is nowhere in evidence, even though his posthumous reputation would consist of little else. "Precipices, mountains, wolves, torrents, rumblings ... Salvator Rosa," as Horace Walpole would write a century later. But the actual range of the work contradicts and exceeds the Byronic caricature that still attaches to the maker.  

Palma il Giovane
Two nudes
early 17th century
drawing
British Museum

Pietro da Cortona
Académie
17th century
drawing
British Museum

Anonymous Italian artist
Pharoah's horsemen engulfed
17th century
drawing
British Museum

Anonymous Italian artist
Académie
17th century
drawing
British Museum

Anonymous Italian artist
Roman statue
17th century
drawing
British Museum

Anonymous Italian artist
Painter sitting on stool, seen from the back
17th century
drawing
British Museum

Anonymous Italian artist
Painter sitting on a block, seen from the back
17th century
drawing
British Museum

Anonymous Italian artist
God the Father
17th century
drawing
British Museum

Anonymous Italian artist working in Florence
Triton with sea nymph and putti
17th century
drawing
British Museum

Anonymous Italian artist
Roman statues
17th century
drawing
British Museum

Anonymous Italian artist
Auricular cartouche with satyrs
17th century
drawing
British Museum

Anonymous Italian artist
Draped women
17th century
drawing
British Museum

Anonymous Italian artist
Seated figure looking down
17th century
drawing
British Museum

I am grateful for the images made available by the British Museum.