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Peaches and Pears in a Glass Bowl
Giovanni Paolo Spadino (Italian (Roman), active about 1687–1703)
Medium/Technique
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
61.2 x 75.9 cm (24 1/8 x 29 7/8 in.)
Credit Line
M. Theresa B. Hopkins Fund
Accession Number59.193
CollectionsEurope
ClassificationsPaintings
The liberally applied white highlights and twisting forms of the leaves are signature elements of the still lifes produced by Giovanni Paolo Spadino in Rome during the 1690s. Unlike the meticulous, studied method of depicting fruit and vegetation that was popular in Rome at the beginning of the seventeenth century, the looser brushwork used to paint Peaches and Pears in a Glass Bowl reflects a more relaxed approach to the genre at the century’s end. Spadino borrows the motif of the glass bowl piled high with ripe fruit from Rome’s most prominent still-life painter at the time, the Flemish expatriate Abraham Brueghel, who was Spadino’s neighbor from 1671 until 1674. Although foreign-born artists, like Brueghel, set the trends in still-life painting at the time, Spadino was able to find a market for his work. His paintings are found in inventories of aristocratic collections in both Rome and Naples.
ProvenanceAbout 1911, Anna Barberini Colonna (b. 1840 - d. 1911), Tagliacozzo, Abruzzo, Italy [see note 1]; by descent within the family and, about 1958, sold by the Corsini family to Luigi Albrighi, Florence [see note 2]; 1959, sold by Albrighi to the MFA for $6000. (Accession Date: March 12, 1959)
NOTES:
[1] Anna Barberini Colonna was the wife of Tommaso Corsini (b. 1835 - d. 1919). A painting in her inventory (about 1911, no. 202), described as a vessel of fruit measuring 60 x 72 cm., is noted to have come from the Barberini collection. This may be the MFA painting.
[2] According to correspondence from Albrighi to the MFA (see letter of August 20, 1964). The painting was accessioned as a work by an unknown Italian painter of the 17th century.
NOTES:
[1] Anna Barberini Colonna was the wife of Tommaso Corsini (b. 1835 - d. 1919). A painting in her inventory (about 1911, no. 202), described as a vessel of fruit measuring 60 x 72 cm., is noted to have come from the Barberini collection. This may be the MFA painting.
[2] According to correspondence from Albrighi to the MFA (see letter of August 20, 1964). The painting was accessioned as a work by an unknown Italian painter of the 17th century.