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Luigi
Sabatelli (born Florence, Italy 1772-died Milan 1850)
The
Brazen Serpent (after Michelangelo); circa 1796,
Rome
Pen and brown ink on off-white paper 13 x 21 ½ inches
(33 x 54.5 cm.) Good condition
Verso: Study of a Muscular Male Leg in Profile (after Michaelangelo), Pen and
brown ink
Provenance:
Possibly Collection of Tommaso Puccini, Pisa ( commission to Sabatelli ), circa
1796;
European Art Market, circa 1960s;
Collection (and later Estate) of Rudolph S. Joseph, Santa Barbara, California
(as anonymous artist);
Fred R. Kline Gallery, Santa Fe, NM. ( here attributed to Sabatelli by Fred
R. Kline)
Supporting
scholars:
Dr. Nicola Spinosa, Director, Capodimonte Museum, Naples;
Dr. Rossana Muzii, Director, National Museum of San Martino, Naples.
Opinion:
The Brazen Serpent is a tour de force by Sabatelli: a drawing
with some thirty dramatically articulated figures interacting within
a tondo format. Working in his mid-20s in Rome, Sabatelli was influenced
by the works of Michelangelo and by Swiss artist Henry Fuseli and
Fuseli’s Roman drawings modeled after Michelangelo, which Sabatelli
is known to have studied. It is plausible that The Brazen Serpent was
a commission from the noted literato Tommaso Puccini who
commissioned many other drawings from Sabatelli of similar diabolic
subject matter and in a similar Fuseli-influenced style(cf. Orestes
Pursued by the Erinyes and The Death of Alcibiades; both
private collections; illustrated in Strozzi, Luigi Sabatelli & Olson,
Italian Drawings 1780-1890). The Brazen Serpent can
readily be seen stylistically as part of Sabatelli’s circa
1790s period which included his distinctive neoclassical engravings
after Dante’s The Divine Comedy and his famous etching The
Plague of Florence (1801)
Sabatelli
was highly esteemed as a painter, draftsman and engraver during his
lifetime. In 1808, at the age of 35, he was appointed to the Chair
of Painting at the Brera Academy in Milan, where he remained for 40
years. His most famous work, made during 1820-25 in Florence, is the
vast tondo in the Sala dell’Iliade in the Palazzo Pitti. During
Sabatelli’s years in Florence he became friends with Ingres,
who was then just establishing a studio in the city.
Fred R. Kline, Santa Fe, New Mexico/September
2003
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