GIOVANNI BATTISTA TIEPOLO (1696-1770)
GIOVANNI BATTISTA TIEPOLO (1696-1770)

The Adoration of the Magi

Details
GIOVANNI BATTISTA TIEPOLO (1696-1770)
The Adoration of the Magi
etching
circa 1740
on laid paper, with an indistinct countermark
a fine impression of the first state (of three)
printing with dark accents, good contrasts and depth
with small margins
some pale staining
generally in very good condition
Plate 43,2 x 29 cm. (17 x 11 3⁄8 in.)
Sheet 45,1 x 30,5 cm. (17 ¾ x 12 in.)
Provenance
Unidentified, indistinct word in dotted blue ink verso (not in Lugt).
Inscribed V. Haller 1841⁄43 in pencil verso.
With David Tunick Inc., New York (with his stocknumber in pencil verso).
Christie's, London, 8 December 1984, lot 632.
Acquired at the above sale; then by descent to present owners.
Literature
A. de Vesme, Le peintre-graveur italien; ouvrage faisant suite au peintre-graveur de Bartsch, Milan, 1906, no. 1, pp. 381-382.
A. Rizzi, The Etchings of the Tiepolos, London, 1971, no. 27, pp. 80-81 (another impression ill.).
H. Russell, Rare Etchings by Giovanni Battista and Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo, Washington 1972, no. 41, p. 83 (another impression ill.).
Exhibited
Hamburg, Hamburger Kunsthalle, Aus der Werkstatt des Künstlers - Druckgraphik und vorbereitende Zeichnungen der Sammlung Hegewisch, March 1999 - October 2000, p. 19 (ill.) & 87.

Brought to you by

Zack Boutwood
Zack Boutwood Cataloguer

Lot Essay

The Adoration of the Magi, Giovanni Battista Tiepolo's largest etching, is related to a much smaller drawing by the artist in pen and brown wash over pencil at the Cantor Arts Center in Stanford, yet one is not a copy or translation of the other into a different medium. The artist clearly saw them as very different works, and Tiepolo's drawing style and his etching manner are quite distinct: in his drawings (see also the following lot), the use of wash lends weight to his figures and objects and grounds the composition, and his lines, however sketchy, are long and firm; the etching in contrast is made up of a myriad of short lines and tiny flicks of the needle. By varying the density and direction of his etched marks, he creates shading and texture. The overall effect of the print is one of constant flux: everything seems aflutter, as if a gust of wind could make the whole scene diffuse and disappear. It is a stylistic peculiarity that can be observed in some of Giovanni Battista's best etchings, in particular the Scherzi and some of the Capricci, and goes beyond mere technical or aesthetic considerations. Rather, by formal means, Tiepolo seems to make a philosophical point: the visible world is not a solid place, but a mirage - diaphanous, fleeting and ephemeral.

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