Saturday, December 31, 2022

Figure Studies (Mainly Ornamental)

Anonymous Flemish Artist
Two Ornamental Figures
16th century
drawing
(retouched by Peter Paul Rubens)
Musée du Louvre

Anonymous Flemish Artist 
after Agnolo Bronzino
Youth flourishing Bouquet of Flowers
16th century
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Louis Boullogne the Younger
Triton supporting Shell
ca. 1718
drawing
(study for painting)
Musée du Louvre

Agnolo Bronzino
Youth playing Pan Pipes
ca. 1560
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Girolamo Mazzola Bedoli
Study for Ornamental Figure
before 1569
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Parmigianino (Francesco Mazzola)
Ornamental Figure - Woman making Music
ca. 1524-27
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Annibale Carracci
Atlantes and Columns
ca. 1597-1602
drawing
(study for frescoes, Galleria Farnese, Rome)
Musée du Louvre

Cavaliere d'Arpino (Giuseppe Cesari)
Design for Fountain with Triton
before 1640
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Anonymous Italian Artist
Two Tritons Fighting
17th century
drawing
(ornamental design for rear of state carriage)
Victoria & Albert Museum, London

Girolamo Miruoli
Flying Cherub
ca. 1549-53
drawing
Musée du Louvre

attributed to Giovanni Angelo del Maino
Ornamental Figure
ca. 1520
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Girolamo Macchietti
Bather
ca. 1570-73
drawing
(study for painting, Bathers at Pozzuoli)
Musée du Louvre

Girolamo Genga
Mythological Embrace
ca. 1500-1505
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Giovanni Francesco Grimaldi
Scheme of Architectural Ornament, with Figures
before 1680
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Peter Paul Rubens after Andrea del Sarto
Figure of Serving Man
ca. 1601-1608
drawing
Musée du Louvre

"The model is part of nature, but it does not necessarily follow that all of nature is in the model; nature is species, while the model is no more than a specimen.  The study of nature should always be the study of the species itself.  Thus the study can never be limited by a single specimen, unless that individual could somehow encapsulate all types of beauty and perfection.  Such perfection of course can exist nowhere other than in a work of art, and there only in a certain measure.  Nature, in the creation of beings, is subject to too many accidents.  . . .  The great cause of the superiority of the Greeks in the imitative arts was the facility that they had to study perfection in nature.  All their monuments demonstrate tremendous resourcefulness in this area.  Looking at their art, one never gets the impression that it was ever the copy of one particular isolated individual, as is regrettably so often the case when one examines modern figures." 

– Antoine Quatremère de Quincy, from Considerations on the Arts of Design in France (1791), translated by Jonathan Murphy 

Friday, December 30, 2022

Figure Studies for Antique Gods Aloft

Gaspare Diziani
Mars in Clouds with Putti
before 1767
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Charles Le Brun
Mars and Bellona
ca. 1650-60
drawing
(study for vault fresco, L'hôtel Lambert, Paris)
Musée du Louvre

Hans von Aachen after Bartholomeus Spranger
Mercury and Ceres
before 1615
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Simon Vouet
Study for Mercury
ca. 1640
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Charles Le Brun
Mercury in Clouds
ca. 1679-84
drawing
(study for vault decoration, Château de Versailles)
Musée du Louvre

Nicolò dell'Abate
Jupiter seated on Clouds
ca. 1560-70
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Giovanni Lanfranco
Jupiter appearing to a Hunter
before 1647
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Bartolomeo Passarotti
Jupiter seated on Clouds
ca. 1580
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Carlo Bianconi
Jupiter abducting Ganymede
1778
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Andrea Appiani the Elder
Aurora in her Chariot
ca. 1800
drawing
Philadelphia Museum of Art

Andrea Appiani the Elder
Aurora in her Chariot
ca. 1800
drawing
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Paolo Farinati
Boreas abducting Orithyia
before 1606
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Charles Le Brun
Flying Divinity
ca. 1650-60
drawing
(study for vault fresco, L'hôtel Lambert, Paris)
Musée du Louvre

Charles Le Brun
Figure of Saturn
ca. 1650
drawing
(study for tapestry)
Musée du Louvre

attributed to Carlo Cignani
Flying Cupid
ca. 1680
drawing
Musée du Louvre

"When we attempt to render visible in its proper dignity a famous painting by Apelles or Timanthes that Pliny or other authors describe in detail, who among us will not produce a piece of work that is insipid or alien to the grandeur of the ancients?  Each, indulging his own genius, makes a new wine instead of the bittersweet Opimian of the ancients and injures those great shades whom I honor with profound veneration.  I adore their very footprints, as it were, rather than that I claim to come near them, even in my imagination."

– Peter Paul Rubens, Letter to Franciscus Junius (1637), translated from Latin 

Thursday, December 29, 2022

Drapery and Figure Studies for Angels

attributed to Simon Vouet
Angel
before 1649
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Louis Boullogne the Younger
Archangel Gabriel
before 1733
drawing
(study for painting, The Annunciation)
Musée du Louvre

Charles Le Brun
Flying Angel
ca. 1670
drawing
(study for painting, Hagar in the Desert)
Musée du Louvre

Eustache Le Sueur
Study for Angel
ca. 1645-48
drawing
(study for fresco cycle, The Life of St Bruno)
Musée du Louvre

Augustin Pajou
Two Flying Angels
ca. 1752-56
drawing
Princeton University Art Museum

Pierre Mignard
Two Flying Angels
before 1695
drawing
Musée du Louvre

attributed to Pierre Mignard
Angel
ca. 1675
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Parmigianino
Study for Angels supporting Clouds
ca. 1522
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Giuseppe Passeri
Design for Ceiling Decoration with Angels
before 1714
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Bernardino Gatti
Angels Reading
ca. 1576
drawing
(study for fresco)
Musée du Louvre

Anthonie Blocklandt
Choir of Angels
ca. 1579
drawing
(study for painting, The Assumption of the Virgin)
Musée du Louvre

Nicolò dell'Abate
Angel carrying the Cross
ca. 1552-58
drawing
Musée du Louvre

attributed to Cherubino Alberti
Study for Angel
ca. 1590
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Alessandro Casolani
Study for Angel
ca. 1580-1600
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Cavaliere d'Arpino (Giuseppe Cesari)
Angel within Acanthus Border
before 1640
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Pieter de Witte (Pietro Candido)
Angel above Gesturing Torso
ca. 1614-15
drawing
Musée du Louvre

"One should therefore represent angels as youthful, between the age of 10 and 20 years, which is the median age and corresponds, according to Saint Denis, to the force and vital power that remains ever constant in the angels, youthful beardless beings with beautiful and pleasing faces, with lively and shining eyes – although the virile gaze, the abundant and shining hair, fair or chestnut in hue, alluring and well-proportioned, is itself an external sign of the beauty of their souls, as Saint Augustine says of the appearance of the Archangel Gabriel when he attends upon the Most Holy Virgin.  In the Old and New Testaments the angels also most commonly show themselves under the aspect of young men of suchlike age and comely presence.  . . .  Ordinarily one should paint angels with magnificent wings, diversely coloured in imitation of nature, not so much because God has created them thus but rather to convey their essentially ethereal character, the agility and speed with which they are endowed, the manner in which they may swoop down from the heavens quite unburdened with corporeal weight, their spirits ever concentrated upon God, moving amongst the clouds because the heavens are indeed their proper abode and from whence they may gently communicate to us that inaccessible light in which they rejoice." 

– Francisco Pacheco, from The Art of Painting: its Antiquity and Greatness (1649), translated by Nicholas Walker

Wednesday, December 28, 2022

Drapery Studies - 18th/19th Centuries

Jean-Baptiste-Henri Deshays
Drapery Study
before 1765
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Pier Leone Ghezzi
Drapery Study
before 1755
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Louis-Joseph Le Lorrain
Drapery Study
before 1759
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Nicolas-Bernard Lépicié
Drapery Study of Sleeve
before 1784
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Nicolas-Bernard Lépicié
Drapery Studies
ca. 1783
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Nicolas-Bernard Lépicié
Drapery Study
ca. 1783
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Pierre Subleyras
Study of Seated Draped Model
before 1749
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Pierre Subleyras
Study of Seated Draped Model
before 1749
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Pierre Subleyras
Study of Seated Draped Model
before 1749
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Giambattista Tiepolo
Drapery Study - Man wearing a Cloak
1752
drawing
Graphische Sammlung,
Staatsgalerie Stuttgart

Louis-Claude Vassé
Study of Four Draped Figures
before 1772
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Anonymous French Artist
Studies of Draped Man leaning over Parapet
18th century
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Jean-Joseph Taillasson
Study of Draped Elder
before 1809
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Jean-Joseph Taillasson
Study of Draped Youth
before 1809
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Pierre Puvis de Chavannes
Drapery Study
ca. 1856
drawing
Musée d'Orsay, Paris

"Let us then examine the draperies of the great masters in these arts: how, for instance, they use to clothe a matron, or a man of rank. Cast an eye on those figures (said he, pointing to some prints after Raphael and Guido, that hung upon the wall): what appearance to you think an English courtier or magistrate, with his Gothic, succinct, plaited garment, and his full-bottomed wig; or one of our ladies in her unnatural dress, pinched and stiffened and enlarged, with hoops and whalebone and buckram, must make, among those figures so decently clad in draperies that fall into such a variety of natural, easy, and ample folds, that cover the body without encumbering it, and adorn without altering the shape?"

– George Berkeley, from Alciphron, or, The Minute Philosopher (1732)