CRISTOFORO MUNARI (REGGIO EMILIA 1667-1720 PISA) AND FRANCESCO CONTI (FLORENCE 1681-1760)
CRISTOFORO MUNARI (REGGIO EMILIA 1667-1720 PISA) AND FRANCESCO CONTI (FLORENCE 1681-1760)
CRISTOFORO MUNARI (REGGIO EMILIA 1667-1720 PISA) AND FRANCESCO CONTI (FLORENCE 1681-1760)
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PROPERTY FROM A EUROPEAN PRIVATE COLLECTION
CRISTOFORO MUNARI (REGGIO EMILIA 1667-1720 PISA) AND FRANCESCO CONTI (FLORENCE 1681-1760)

A girl playing a mandora, with a lute, a violin, a recorder, books and blue and white porcelain on a table

細節
CRISTOFORO MUNARI (REGGIO EMILIA 1667-1720 PISA) AND FRANCESCO CONTI (FLORENCE 1681-1760)
A girl playing a mandora, with a lute, a violin, a recorder, books and blue and white porcelain on a table
oil on canvas
47 1/4 x 35 3/4 in. (190.5 x 91 cm.)
來源
[From a Private Collection]; Christie's, New York, 31 May 1989, lot 106, as Cristoforo Munari, where acquired by the present owner.
出版
F. Baldassari, Cristoforo Munari, Milan, 1998, pp. 186-187, no. 94, illustrated.
F. Berti, Francesco Conti artista dei marchesi Riccardi, in C. Giannini and S.M. Trkulja, eds., Stanze segrete. Gli artisti dei Riccardi, exhibition catalogue, Florence, 2005, p. 144.
F. Berti, in E. and L. Piacenti, eds., Maestri della pittura toscana, 2006, pp. 38-40, fig. 1.
F. Berti, Francesco Conti, Florence, 2010, p. 251, no. 1.
拍場告示
We are grateful to Dr. Thiemo Wind for identifying the musical instruments represented. The title now reads, ‘A girl playing a mandora, with a lute, a violin, a recorder, books and blue and white porcelain on a table’.

榮譽呈獻

Jonquil O’Reilly
Jonquil O’Reilly Vice President, Specialist, Head of Sale

拍品專文

The elegant arrangement of musical instruments, books and Kangxi period (1662-1722) Chinese porcelain, with their sensitively rendered reflections and textures, are typical of the still-life paintings that won Cristoforo Munari great fame throughout his lifetime. After making a name for himself in Reggio Emila under the patronage of Rinaldo I d’Este, Duke of Modena, Munari moved to Rome for three years before settling in Florence, where he produced still lifes for the Medici court. The present work is apparently unique within the artist’s oeuvre due to the presence of the female figure; no other paintings by the artist include staffage, with the exception of Munari’s Self-portrait (Uffizi, Corridoio Vasariano).

Francesca Baldassari (loc. cit.) suggests that Munari painted the present still life around 1710, and that the lute-playing figure was painted by his Florentine contemporary, Francesco Conti (1681-1760), an attribution later confirmed by Federico Berti (loc. cit.). Baldassari compares the graceful facial features and painterly draftsmanship to the Saint Lucy that Conti painted for the church of San Martino in Terenzano, near Florence. Since both Munari and Conti are documented as working for the Riccardi around 1710, Baldassari speculates that the present lot might have been a commission from that distinguished Florentine family. The harmonious union of the figure and still life elements in this painting suggests that the artists worked well with one another, and led Baldassari to suggest that the Riccardi may have commissioned other collaborative works from them, which are now untraced. In fact, Berti has identified one particular payment of 15 scudi from the Riccardi to Munari for "un quadro dipintovi Istrumenti musicali" as possibly relating specifically to the present lot (ibid.).

Early sources indicate that Conti was a student of Simone Pignoni (see O. Marrini, Serie di ritratti di eccell. pittori dipinti di propria mano..., II, 1, Florence, 1766, n. XIII). Under the Riccardi’s patronage, he traveled to Rome, where he completed his studies under Giovanni Maria Morandi and Carlo Maratti.

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