Artibus et Historiae no. 91 (XLVI)

2025, ISSN 0391-9064

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STEFANIA MASON - From Venezia incoronata to the Età del Ferro: New Paintings and Drawings by Palma il Giovane (pp. 191–204)

This essay begins by presenting and analysing two paintings and several drawings by Palma il Giovane, several of which may be situated in the early 1580s, the most interesting period of the artist’s long career; they highlight lesser-known aspects of his production. In two sketches, Palma’s very first ideas for his large oval of Victory Crowning Venice for the Doge’s Palace in Venice (1579/1580), we notice the artist’s apparently unpremeditated use of the pen, as if he were thinking spontaneously on paper while considering solutions for the task at hand. A study for the Vision of Saint John the Evangelist is of a slightly later date, when Palma did not yet seem to be certain about the evangelist's position in regard to his painting’s placement in the new albergo of the Scuola Grande di San Giovanni Evangelista. The artist’s Martyrdom of Saints Hermagoras and Fortunatus representing a rather rare theme should also be placed in this phase. I suggest that it was meant to serve as the panel of a polyptych or the shutter of a small organ. Other preparatory studies can be placed in a later moment: a sheet from the 1590s linked with one of the falling figures in the altarpiece of the Martyrdom of Saint Catherine in the church of the Frari; and another of intense pathos for Saint Cecilia at the Organ, which Palma inventively transformed with a basic structural change into the Suicide of Lucretia on canvas. Finally, the essay presents a pen study relating to the Età del Ferro commissioned by Alexander I Pico for his palace in Mirandola, a work taking us to 1609 and Palma’s career in the Stati estensi.



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