Venetian School, modelled on PAOLO VERONESE (Verona, 1528 - Venice, 1588).

‘Mar…
Description

Venetian School, modelled on PAOLO VERONESE (Verona, 1528 - Venice, 1588). ‘Martyrdom of Saint Justina’. Oil on canvas. Re-coloured. It presents faults in the pictorial surface. Measurements: 97 x 75,5 cm; 117 x 87 cm (frame). This painting follows the model of the work painted by Veronese, which is in the main altar of the basilica Santa Giustina in Padua. Veronese portrayed Saint Justina of Padua on several occasions. It is in this work, however, that he displays the greatest sumptuousness and scenographic complexity. Perhaps its privileged location led Veronese to intricate the depiction of the martyrdom of the saint, who is almost hidden among the number of characters that populate the scene, with various earthly and heavenly entourages swirling around the protagonist. Numerous engravings were made of this work, which spread the mastery of the composition. An example of this is the engraving belonging to the Valparaíso collection by Agostino Carracci. In this painting the artist follows the original model, although he allows himself certain licences that add originality to the painting. Venetian Baroque painting was a transforming force for much of the rest of the European schools, and masters such as Rubens, Velázquez and Van Dyck succumbed to the works produced by this school during the 16th and 17th centuries. The vibrant colouring, the fluidity and strength of the brushstroke and a passionate movement full of gestures and theatricality made it a landmark often imitated. The great painters such as Titian, Tintoretto, Bassano and, more closely related to us, Veronese, championed this vision. Veronese, like his contemporaries, maintained elaborate compositions in which the scenes seem to move on their own. The loose, almost pure brushstrokes give the sensation of immediacy and lead us to an energetic vision in which the colour unfolds, shining with flashes of red in contrast with a blue that is lost to black and suddenly shines through to lead white. All this colourfulness and fluency are expressed in Veronese's luxuriousness. A precious treatment of fabrics, jewels and textures emanates from each of the elements in the painting. In the case of our painting this is clearly evident.

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Venetian School, modelled on PAOLO VERONESE (Verona, 1528 -

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BISESTI, Augustine. Coats of Arms of the Noble Families of Verona faithfully extracted from the original manuscript Work in two volumes and a folio fascicle by Carlo Carinelli Cittadino Romano e Canonico Veronese entitled "La verità nel suo centro riconosciuta nelle famiglie nobili e cittadine di Verona" drawn by Agostino Bisesti. Verona, August 30, 1856 Folio. 310x215 mm. Modern amateur binding, half leather and marbled hardback, corners, gilt title on spine. Title page with title and two coats of arms, 296 colored coats of arms with family names. Within frames, six per page. Very good copy. Wonderful volume in coeval coloring. Copy of the coats of arms that appear in the manuscript by 17th-century scholar Carlo Carinelli, mentioned in the title. This manuscript is in the Biblioteca Civica di Verona.A. Bisesti, son of the Veronese printer-librarian and publisher Pietro who in 1827 published a well-known guide to Verona, accompanying it with a plan of the city dated 1822, probably by his son Agostino. Also from these is an 1831 watercolor drawing of Verona preserved in the Verona Municipal Library. Both are traced to Persico's, and contemporary with the plans of Ronzani, Rothenburg, Bennassuti and Malacarne. Still in the Municipal Library of Verona are other of his drawings, copies of details from Frambotto's map. Many of his engravings were published to accompany Giuseppe Venturi's compendium of Veronese history (1825) and the guide to the Museo Lapidario scaligero (1827) by the same abbot, works that also came out of the presses of Pietro.C. Carinelli, La verità nel suo centro riconosciuta nelle famiglie nobili e cittadine di Verona, I 113 (ms. at the Bibl. Comunale di Verona).On Agostino Bisesti, see Giuliana Baso, Francesca Rizzi and Vladimiro Valerio, in: https://www.digitaldisci.it/bisesti-agostino. Folio. 310x215 mm. Modern custom binding, quarter calf and marbled cardboard, corners, gilt title on spine. Titlepage with two coat of arms, 296 coat of arms with families' names within frame, six for page. Nice work. Splendid volume in contemporary coloring. Copy of the coats of arms that appear in the manuscript of the seventeenth-century scholar Carlo Carinelli, quoted in the title. This manuscript is found in the Civic Library of Verona.A. Bisesti, son of the Veronese typographer-bookseller and publisher Pietro who in 1827 published a well-known guide to Verona accompanied by a map of the city dated 1822, probably by his son Agostino. Of these is also a watercolor drawing of Verona from 1831 preserved in the Municipal Library of Verona. They are both modeled on that of Persico, and contemporary with the plans of Ronzani, Rothenburg, Bennassuti and Malacarne. Still in the Municipal Library of Verona other drawings by him are preserved, copies of details of Frambotto's paper. Many of his engravings were published together with the Veronese historical compendium by Giuseppe Venturi (1825) and the guide to the Scaligero Lapidary Museum (1827) by the same abbot, works also released from the presses of Pietro.