Pietro Berrettini, called Pietro da Cortona (Cortona 1596-1669 Rome)
Pietro Berrettini, called Pietro da Cortona (Cortona 1596-1669 Rome)

Study of a nymph, her arms outstretched

Details
Pietro Berrettini, called Pietro da Cortona (Cortona 1596-1669 Rome)
Study of a nymph, her arms outstretched
black and white chalk
7 ¼ x 9 ¼ in. (18.3 x 23.5 cm)
Provenance
Nathaniel Hone, London (1718-1784) (L. 2793).
Sir Joshua Reynolds, London (1723-1792) (L. 2364); Harry Phillips, London, 5-26 March 1798, unidentified lot.
Sir John Chichester (ca.1752–1808).
Rev. John Sanford (1777-1855), and by descent to
Field-Marshal Paul Sanford Methuen, 3rd Lord Methuen, Corsham Court (1732-1795); Christie's, London, 14 May 1920, lot 1; subsequently bought back by the Hon. Paul Ayshford Methuen, R.A., F.S.A., 4th Lord Methuen, Corsham Court (1886-1974); Sotheby's, London, 3 July 1996, lot 15.
Literature
G. Briganti, Pietro da Cortona o della pittura barocca, Florence, 1962, p. 289 (2nd edn. ed. by L. Laureati and L. Trezzani, Florence, 1982, p. 275).
M. Campbell, Pietro da Cortona at the Pitti Palace. A Study of the Planetary Rooms and Related Projects, Princeton, 1977, no. 90.
J. Halloway, ‘Italian Seventeenth-Century Drawings from British Private Collections’, The Burlington Magazine, CXIV, no. 835, 1972, p. 730.
A. Morandotti, 'Un disegno di Pietro da Cortona per la Sala di Apollo in Palazzo Pitti', in M. Di Giampaolo, ed., Dal disegno all'opera compiuta, Perugia, 1992, pp. 158, 160, n. 18.
S. Prosperi Valenti Rodinò, Pietro da Cortona e il disegno, exhib. cat., Rome, Accademia Nazionale di San Luca, 1998, p. 162, under no. 8.19.
J.M. Merz, Pietro da Cortona und sein Kreis: die Zeichnungen in Düsseldorf, Berlin, 2005, p. 248, under no. 76.
Exhibited
London, Royal Academy of Arts, Exhibition of 17th Century Art in Europe, 1938, no. 416.
Bristol, Art Gallery, Treasures from West Country Collections, 1967 (no catalogue).
Edinburgh, Festival Society, The Scottish Art Council, Italian 17th Century Drawings from British Private Collections, 1972, no. 8 (catlogue by A. Blunt).
Sale Room Notice
Please note that the drawing was published by Jörg Merz in 2005 as a work by Ciro Ferri (see literature), an opinion which he maintained upon direct inspection. The attribution to Pietro da Cortona has been recently reaffirmed by both Simonetta Prosperi Valenti Rodinò (on the basis of a photograph) and Nicholas Turner (upon inspection of the original).

Lot Essay

This vibrant black chalk drawing is for one of the nymphs offering exotic gifts to the sun god, featured at right on the ceiling fresco of the Sala di Apollo at Palazzo Pitti, Florence (Fig. 1). Commissioned from Pietro da Cortona by Grand Duke Ferdinand II de’ Medici, the decoration of the Sala di Apollo went through a long gestation. Begun in 1642-43, when the artist designed and frescoed the figures from the main group (Apollo, Ferdinand II, Fame and Hercules), it was left unfinished upon his departure for Rome in 1647. Responding belatedly to the Grand Duke’s persistent requests to continue the work, twelve years later, in the Fall of 1659, Cortona sent his best pupil Ciro Ferri, who completed the frescoes with the aid of drawings and cartoons executed by his master in Rome (Briganti, op. cit., pp. 236-39).

While the complex iconographical program for the Planetary rooms at Pitti was prepared by the court poet Francesco Rondinelli, the development of Cortona’s ideas for the decoration of the ceiling, considered a peak in his career and a milestone in Baroque decoration, can be followed through his drawings. Datable to the earlier phase of the design, around 1647, are some compositional sketches in pen and ink for the entire ceiling, followed by rough chalk studies for the single figures, now in Rome, Florence and New York (Prosperi Valenti Rodinò, op. cit., no. 8.15-18 ill.). The present sheet, however, was developed later as it relates to a figure that was frescoed by Ferri only during the 1659 campaign. It can be dated as early as 1656, the year when Cortona resumed work on designing the ceiling and asked Rondinelli to provide him with the ‘soggetto’ and other details which he had forgotten in the intervening years (Campbell, op. cit., pp. 144-45).

Coming with an illustrious British provenance, this study of a nymph offering a pineapple is caught in a powerful sotto in su, masterfully rendered with layered strokes of black chalk, a distinctive technique developed by Cortona later in his career, which infuses the figure with a subtle sense of movement. An important record for the artist's workshop practice, the present drawing attests to the high degree of attention and finish he dedicated to each figure while working in Rome. This provided a model that was diligently followed by Ciro Ferri while painting the fresco in Florence.

We are grateful to Simonetta Prosperi Valenti Rodinò for confirming the attribution of this drawing based on digital photographs.

Fig. 1 Ciro Ferri based on drawings by Pietro da Cortona, Sala di Apollo (ceiling, detail). Florence, Palazzo Pitti.

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