Portrait of the Prince of Castiglione

Ritratto del Principe di Castiglione

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Titolo dell'opera:

Portrait of the Prince of Castiglione

Acquisizione:

Marcello Durazzo

Autore:

Leoni, Ottavio

Epoca:

Inventario:

D2439

Tecnica:

pietra nera

Descrizione:

The collection of portraits on cerulean paper by Ottavio Leoni (Rome 1578-1630) preserved in the civic collections of Genoa comprises 50 sheets and is certainly of great importance in terms of quality and chronological variety: these are, in fact, drawings of a high standard of execution, whose creation can be traced throughout the master's career as a portraitist, between the end of the 16th century and the first thirty years of the 17th century. The range of characters documented in the portraits is also very varied: a vivid cross-section of Roman society at the beginning of the 17th century. Historical and artistic research and the inscriptions on the sheets (some autographed, others from collections, and sometimes partially faded and cut) have in some cases made it possible to name the figures “photographed” by Leoni: in the Genoese collection, among the many possible examples, there are portraits of nobles, such as Vittoria Caetani dell'Aquila d'Aragona, the Marquis Paris Pinelli and Alessandro VII Sforza, Duke of Segni; portraits of princes and princesses, such as Maria Felice Peretti or the Prince of Castiglione; cardinals, such as Monsignor Gerolamo Grimaldi, Cardinal of Trinità dei Monti; but also figures from different social backgrounds, prominent in Rome at the time, such as the composer and organist Paolo Quagliati. There are also faces that have remained ‘anonymous’, both aristocrats and humble commoners: examples include the sheets with ‘Portraits of a man and a woman’ or those with ‘A monk and a child’, depicted individually and then arranged in pairs within a single blue paper passe-partout with an elegant gold border by a collector between the 18th and 19th centuries. The sheets in Genoa belong to different periods of Ottavio Leoni's career: there are older portraits, dating back to the end of the 16th century and characterised by more marked and continuous contours, more insistent, outlined only in black pencil (an example is a “Portrait of a Young Man”); others in which black pencil strokes are accompanied by white chalk, as in the case of the famous “Portrait of Vincenzo Gonzaga, Duke of Mantua”; Finally, there are others dating back to the last phase of the artist's career, between the second and third decades of the 17th century, in which there is a more nuanced use of red and black pencils and chalk, with more delicate transitions and soft coloured shading: examples from this period include the aforementioned ‘Portrait of the Prince of Castiglione’ and two ‘Portraits of a Man and a Woman’, mounted in a single passe-partout, in which the use of red pencil is highly characteristic. Some of the drawings in the Palazzo Rosso Drawings and Prints Cabinet – all of which came into the collection through Marcello Durazzo's bequest to the civic library in 1848 - bear the inscription “Ulisse Aldrovandi 1799”, an interesting indication of their previous provenance from the collections of Count Ulisse Aldrovandi, patron, collector and amateur painter of the late 18th century, of the Aldrovandi Marescotti family of Bologna. Aldrovandi, an academic of fine arts together with his brother Carlo Filippo, was in contact with artists and writers in his city and had established a sort of academy in his own home, where he had gathered paintings - particularly Nordic ones - but also drawings, prints and art books. Portrait of the Prince of Castiglione.