Giovanni Battista Tiepolo (Italian pronunciation: [dʒoˈvanːi baˈtːista ˈti̯ɛːpolo]) (March 5, 1696 – March 27, 1770), also known as Gianbattista or Giambattista Tiepolo, was an Italian painter and printmaker from the Republic of Venice. He was prolific, and worked not only in Italy, but also in Germany and Spain.
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Born in Venice, Tiepolo was the youngest of six children born to Orsetta, Tiepolo's mother and his father, Domenico Tiepolo, a sea captain. While the Tiepolo surname belongs to a patrician family, Giambattista's father did not claim patrician status. The future artist was baptised in his parish church (San Pietro di Castello) as Giovanni Battista, in honour of his godfather, a Venetian nobleman called Giovanni Battista Dorià. His father Domenico died a year after his birth, leaving Orsetta in difficult financial circumstances.
Giambattista was initially a pupil of Gregorio Lazzarini, but the influences from elder contemporaries such as Sebastiano Ricci and Giovanni Battista Piazzetta are stronger in his work. At 19 years of age, Tiepolo completed his first major commission, the Sacrifice of Isaac (now in the Accademia). He left Lazzarini studio in 1717, and was received into the Fraglia or guild of painters.
In 1719, Tiepolo was married to Maria Cecilia Guardi, sister of two contemporary Venetian painters Francesco and Giovanni Antonio Guardi. Together, Tiepolo and his wife had nine children. Four daughters and three sons survived childhood. Two sons, Domenico and Lorenzo, painted with him as his assistants and achieved some independent recognition. His third son became a priest.
A patrician from the Friulian town of Udine, Dionisio Delfino, commissioned a fresco decoration of the chapel and palace from the young Tiepolo (completed 1726–1728). Tiepolo's first masterpieces in Venice were a cycle of enormous canvases painted to decorate a large reception room of Ca' Dolfin on the Grand Canal of Venice (ca. 1726–1729), depicting ancient battles and triumph.
These early masterpieces, novel for Venetian frescoes in their luminosity, brought him many commissions. He painted canvases for churches such as that of Verolanuova (1735–1740), for the Scuola dei Carmini (1740–1747), and the Chiesa degli Scalzi (1743–1744; now destroyed) in Cannaregio, a ceiling for the Palazzi Archinto and Casati-Dugnani in Milan (1731), the Colleoni Chapel in Bergamo (1732–1733), a ceiling for the Gesuati (Santa Maria del Rosario) in Venice of St. Dominic Instituting the Rosary (1737–1739), Palazzo Clerici, Milan (1740), decorations for Villa Cordellini at Montecchio Maggiore (1743–1744) and for the ballroom of the Palazzo Labia, now a television studio in Venice, showing the Story of Cleopatra (1745–1750).
By 1750, Tiepolo's reputation was firmly established throughout Europe. That year, at the behest of Prince Bishop Karl Philip von Greiffenklau, he traveled to Würzburg where he resided for three years and executed ceiling paintings in the New Residenz palace (completed 1744). His painting for the grandiose Neumann-designed entrance staircase (Treppenhaus) is a massive ceiling fresco at 7287 square feet (677 m2), and was completed in collaboration with his sons, Giandomenico and Lorenzo.[1] His Allegory of the Planets and Continents depicts Apollo embarking on his daily course; deities around him symbolize the planets; allegorical figures (on the cornice) represent the four continents Europe, Asia, Africa and America. He included a self-portrait beside a portrait of his son Giandomenico in the Europe section of this fresco.[2] He also frescoed the Kaisersaal salon.
Tiepolo returned to Venice in 1753. He was now in demand locally, as well as abroad where he was elected President of the Academy of Padua. He went on to complete theatrical frescoes for churches; the Triumph of Faith for the Chiesa della Pietà; panel frescos for Ca' Rezzonico (which now also holds his ceiling fresco from the Palazzo Barbarigo); and paintings for patrician villas in the Venetian countryside, such as Villa Valmarana in Vicenza and an elaborate panegyric ceiling for the now nearly-vacant Villa Pisani in Stra.
In celebrated frescoes at the Palazzo Labia, he depicted two frescoes on the life of Cleopatra: Meeting of Anthony and Cleopatra[1] and Banquet of Cleopatra,[2] as well as a central ceiling fresco depicts Triumph of Bellerophon over Time. He collaborated with an expert in perspective, Girolamo Mengozzi Colonna. Colonna who also designed sets for opera highlights the increasing tendency towards composition as a staged fiction in his frescoes. The architecture of the Banquet fresco also recalls Veronese's Wedding at Cannae. In 1757, he painted the altar piece commissioned by the family Thiene, the work represents the apotheosis of Saint Cajetan, the altar piece is in the church of hamlet of Rampazzo in the Camisano Vicentino.
In 1761, Charles III commissioned Tiepolo to create a ceiling fresco to decorate the throne room of the Royal Palace of Madrid. The panegyric theme is the Apotheosis of Spain and has allegorical depictions recalling the dominance of Spain in the Americas and across the globe. In Spain, he incurred the jealousy and the bitter opposition of the rising champion of Neoclassicism, Anton Raphael Mengs.
Tiepolo died in Madrid on March 27, 1770.
After his death, the rise of stern Neoclassicism and the post-revolutionary decline of royal absolutism led to the slow decline of the Tiepolo style, but had failed to dent his reputation. By 1772, Tiepolo's son was sufficiently famous to be documented as painter to Doge Giovanni Cornaro, in charge of the decoration of Palazzo Mocenigo a San Polo.
Works of Tiepolo were exhibited between July 26 and September 29 1979 at the Palazzo Ducale Museum in Venice Italy. The exhibition was catalogued and published the same year in the book Tiepolo, Tecnica E immaginazione by George Knox.
In his most fluid elaborations, Tiepolo has closest affinity to Ricci, Piazzetta, and Federico Bencovich. He is a shadowless fresco artist, a sunnier rococo Pietro da Cortona. His sumptuous historical set-pieces are enveloped in a regal luminosity. He is principally known for his fresco work, particularly his panegyric ceilings. These followed the Baroque tradition begun a century before by Pietro da Cortona, converting roof to painted sky, elevating petty aristocrats to divine status, and allowing for vast compositions that merged with the delicate ornamentation of the stucco frames. Like Luca Giordano, his palette was muted, almost water-color like. Like Giordano, he was prolific. With an unrivaled Sprezzatura, he painted worlds of fresco, and some such as the walls of Villa Valmarana in Vicenza, not only peer into the mythologic scenes, but are meant to relocate viewers into their midst. The earliest example of this is perhaps his canvases in the Ca' Dolfin, which allowed Tiepolo to introduce exuberant costumes, classical sculpture, and action that appears to spill from the frames into the room. Originally set into recesses, they were surrounded with frescoed frames.
While his painting is infused with the Venetian spirit, his luminosity is not seen in the previous masters; however, Tiepolo is considered the last "Olympian" painter of the Venetian Republic. Like Titian before him, Tiepolo was an international star, treasured by royalty far afield for his ability to depict glory in fresco.
His children painted figures with a design similar to that of their father, but with distinctive, including genre, styles.
Work | Date | Location | Link |
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The Martyrdom of St. Bartholomew | 1722 | San Stae, Venice | |
The Rape of Europa | c. 1725 | Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice | |
Allegory of the Power of Eloquence | c. 1725 | Courtauld Institute, Modello for Palazzo Sandi, Venice | |
Frescoes | 1726 | Episcopal palace, Udine | |
Perseus & Andromeda | 1730 | Frick Collection | |
Education of the Virgin | 1732 | S. Maria della Consolazione (Fava), Venice | |
Angel rescuing Hagar | 1732 | Scuola di San Rocco, Venice | |
John the Baptist preaching | 1732–1733 | Cappella Colleoni, Bergamo | |
Beheading of John the Baptist | 1732–1733 | Cappella Colleoni, Bergamo | |
Scourge of the Serpents | 1732–1735 | Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice | |
Joseph receiving ring from pharaoh | 1732–1735 | Dulwich Picture Gallery | |
Triumph of Zephyr and Flora | 1734–1735 | Museo del Settecento Veneziano, Ca' Rezzonico, Venice | |
Jupiter and Danaë | 1736 | Universitet Konsthistoriska Institutionen, Stockholm | |
The Finding of Moses | 1736-1738 | National Gallery of Scotland, Edinburgh | |
Pope St. Clement Adoring the Trinity | 1737–1738 | Alte Pinakothek, Munich | |
Saint Augustin, Saint Louis of France, Saint John the Evangelist and a bishop | 1737–1738 | Palais des Beaux-Arts de Lille | |
Institution of the Rosary | 1737–1739 | Santa Maria del Rosario (Gesuati), Venice | |
Christ Carrying the Cross | 1737–1738 | Sant'Alvise, Venice | |
The Madonna of Mount Carmel | 1730s | Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan | |
Virgin with Six Saints | 1737–1740 | Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest |
Work | Date | Location | Link | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alexander the Great and Campaspe in the Studio of Apelles | 1740 | Getty Center, Los Angeles | ||
The Virgin Appearing to St. Philip Neri | 1740 | Museo Diocesano, Camerino | ||
The Gathering of Manna | 1740–1742 | Parrocchiale, Verolanuova | ||
The Sacrifice of Melchizedek | 1740–1742 | Parrocchiale, Verolanuova | ||
Rinaldo Enchanted by Armida | 1742 | Art Institute of Chicago | ||
Rinaldo and Armida in Her Garden | 1742 | Art Institute of Chicago | ||
Armida Abandoned by Rinaldo | 1742 | Art Institute of Chicago | ||
Rinaldo and the Magus of Ascalon | 1742 | Art Institute of Chicago | ||
The Triumph of Virtue and Nobility over Ignorance | 1743 | Norton Simon Museum(Pasadena, CA) | ||
Empire of Flora | 1743 | The Legion of Honor(San Francisco, CA) | ||
Time Unveiling Truth | c. 1743 | Museo Civico Palazzo Chiericati, Vicenza | ||
The Banquet of Cleopatra | 1743 | National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne | [3] | |
Worshippers | 1743–1745 | Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice | ||
Apollo and Daphne | 1744–1745 | Musée du Louvre, Paris | ||
Discovery of the True Cross | c. 1745 | Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice | ||
Time Unveiling Truth | c. 1745–1750 | Museum of Fine Arts, Boston | ||
Frescoes of the story of Cleopatra | 1746 | Palazzo Labia, Venice | ||
The Virgin with 3 female Dominican Saints | 1739–1748 | Santa Maria del Rosario (Gesuati), Venice | ||
Last Communion of St. Lucy | 1747–1748 | Santi Apostoli, Venice | ||
The Banquet of Cleopatra and Antony | 1747–1750 | North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh | ||
The Glorification of the Barbaro Family | 1749–1750 | Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York | ||
St. James the Greater Conquering the Moors | 1749–1750 | Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest |
Work | Date | Location | Link |
---|---|---|---|
Frescoes | 1751–1753 | Residenz, Wurzburg | [4] [5] |
Collecting Manna | c. 1751 | National Museum of Serbia, Belgrade | |
Allegory of Planets and Continents | 1752 | Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York | [6] |
The Death of Hyacinth | 1752–1753 | Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection, Madrid | |
Adoration of the Magi | 1753 | Alte Pinakothek, Munich | |
Coronation of the Virgin | 1754 | Kimbell Art Museum, Dallas (modelo for Ospedale della Pietà) | |
An Allegory with Venus and Time | 1754–1758 | National Gallery, London | |
Frescoes from Roman mythology | 1757 | Villa Valmarana, Vicenza | |
A Seated Man and a Girl with a Pitcher | c. 1755 | National Gallery, London | |
The Theological Virtues | c. 1755 | Musées Royaux des Beaux-Arts, Brussels | |
The Martyrdom of St. Agatha | c. 1756 | Staatliche Museen, Berlin | |
Allegory of Merit Accompanied by Nobility and Virtue | 1757–1758 | Museo del Settecento Veneziano, Ca' Rezzonico, Venice | |
The Vision of St. Anne | 1759 | Gemäldegalerie, Dresden | |
Virtue and Nobility Crowning Love | 1759-1761 | Museum of Fine Arts | |
Modello for the Apotheosis of the Pisani Family | 1760 | Musée des Beaux-Arts d'Angers | |
Madonna of the Goldfinch | c. 1760 | National Gallery of Art, Washington | |
Woman with a Parrot | 1760–1761 | Ashmolean Museum, Oxford | |
Apotheosis of the Pisani Family | 1761–1762 | Villa Pisani, Stra | |
San Carlo Borromeo | 1767–1769 | Cincinnati Art Museum | |
The Immaculate Conception | 1767–1769 | Museo del Prado, Madrid | |
Glory of Spain | 1762–1766 | Throne Room of Royal Palace of Madrid | |
The Apotheosis of the Spanish Monarchy | 1762–1766 | Queen's Antechamber, Palacio Real, Madrid | |
Venus and Vulcan | 1762–1766 | Halberdiers' Room, Palacio Real, Madrid |