Wednesday, November 15, 2023

Artist of the Day, November 15, 2023: Antonio Canova, an Italian sculptor - Neoclassical (#1958)

 Antonio Canova (1757–1822) is considered the greatest Neoclassical sculptor of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. He was credited with ushering in a new aesthetic of clear, regularized form and calm repose inspired by classical antiquities. He was also renowned for his carving abilities and the refinement of his marble surfaces, which seemed as supple as real flesh.

Canova was born in northern Italy to a family of sculptors and stonecutters, including his grandfather, Pasino Canova, and his father, Pietro. Nineteenth-century biographies of the artist, in a tradition dating back to the Renaissance, suggest Canova’s artistic talent revealed itself at an early age when, as a young child, he carved a lion made out of butter at a dinner party. Although this has been dismissed by scholars as apocryphal, by the age of fourteen, he was apprenticed to the sculptor Giuseppe Bernardi, who was based first in Pagnano, then Venice. After Bernardi’s death in 1774, Canova entered the studio of Bernardi’s nephew, Giovanni Ferrari. In Venice, Canova was heavily influenced by casts of ancient works that he saw, particularly those in the collection of Filippo Farsetti, for whom he completed his first independent work.

In 1779–80, Canova made the Grand Tour of Italy, where he saw the great collections of art in Bologna, Florence, Rome, and Naples, an experience he recorded in a travel diary. In 1781, he established his own studio in Rome, which had a thriving cultural and arts scene.

Throughout the 1780s and 1790s, Canova’s reputation continued to grow. He completed commissions in a wide variety of genres: funerary monuments, religious subjects, portraits, and mythological deities and heroes inspired by classical antiquity. Despite the political turbulence of the period, including the French invasions of Italy and the establishment of the Napoleonic empire, Canova successfully continued to work for a wide range of patrons. These included Napoleon and the Bonaparte family, and his Bust of Napoleon was one of the most widely regarded and reproduced portraits of the emperor.

After the French Empire collapsed in 1815, travel and trade resumed in full force across the continent. The last seven years of Canova’s life were dominated by commissions from British patrons, who were drawn to the artist’s sinuous figures, and by the design and construction of a church in his hometown of Possagno. The Tempio, as it is known, allowed Canova to showcase his skills not just as a sculptor, but also as a painter and architect. A cross between the Roman Pantheon and Athenian Parthenon, the church brought together classical architectural features in the celebration of Christ. Canova was also responsible for the design of the sculptural metopes on the exterior; unfortunately, he died in 1822 before those works were completed.

At his death, commemorations were held in Rome, Venice, and Possagno, and he was widely mourned and honored across Europe. The degree of his fame can be measured by the treatment of his corpse, as if it were a saintly relic. Although his body was entombed in the Tempio in Possagno, his hand was preserved at the Accademia di Belle Arti, Venice, and his heart placed in a tomb built by Neoclassical sculptors based on his own design in Santa Maria Gloriosa dei Frari

The degree of Canova’s fame and the breadth of his sculptural production can also be measured by the popularity of his studio in Rome, which became a “must-see” tourist destination. He had a large workshop with many assistants, common practice for sculptors who had many commissions, due to the lengthy and grueling process of working in marble. Canova was frequently present, modeling large clay models or carving marble, and travelers on the Grand Tour made it a regular stop in the hopes of seeing the artist or simply admiring his works. For those visitors who could not afford a Canova sculpture, there was no shortage of tourist souvenirs available in the city; many purchased small cast impressions of intaglios after Canova’s works that were available as sets from local vendors.

Visitors to the studio were introduced to the full range of Canova’s work, and the studio became a proto-museum of sorts. It also laid bare the many steps of sculptural production. Keeping plaster casts on hand also allowed Canova and his assistants to make replicas of works for patrons; he could, moreover, continue to make modifications to the casts as his ideas about the work changed. Therefore, although sometimes he produced several versions of a work, he never copied himself directly. The Perseus with the Head of Medusa in the Met’s collection, for instance, was made for the Polish countess Valeria Tarnowski, who had seen Triumphant Perseus in the studio. The Met’s version, however, is not a mere copy of the first; in the second version, Canova grew more daring in his execution of the sculpture and eliminated the marble strut that supports Perseus’ outstretched arm in the Vatican’s version.

In the years following his death, Canova’s fame was so great that works that remained in his studio were completed and sent off to eager patrons. A brisk trade in Canova works was complemented by the reproduction of his more lyrical designs in other decorative arts. A museum in Possagno was opened in the artist’s memory and features a large collection of working casts that formerly had occupied the studio. Although Canova’s reputation suffered a decline in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, it was revived by Italian scholarship in the 1950s, and today he has resumed his place as one of the most important sculptors in the history of art.

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Antonio Canova Self-portrait, ca. 1792
Facade of Tempio Canoviano - Possagno, Italy, 2014
Dedalus and Icarus, ca. 1777-79
Theseus and the Minotaur, ca. 1781-82
Theseus and the Minotaur, ca. 1781-82
Psyche Revived by Cupid's Kiss, ca. 1787–93 detail
Psyche Revived by Cupid's Kiss, ca. 1787–93
Canova Lions, ca. 1792
Ercole e Lica, ca. 1795-1815
Repentant Magdalen, ca. 1796
The Three Graces Dancing, ca. 1799
 Venus and Cupid, ca. 1799
 Head of Medusa, ca. 1801
Pauline Borghese Bonaparte, represented as Venus Victrix, ca. 1804-08 detail
Pauline Bonaparte as Venus Victrix, ca. 1806-08
Letizia Ramolino Bonaparte, ca. 1807
Paris, ca. 1807-12
Monumental tomb of Vittorio Alfieri, ca. 1810 Santa Croce, Florence
Terpsichore, ca. 1811
Dancer, ca. 1811–12
Antonio Canova, ca. 1813
Dancer with Finger on Chin, ca. 1814
The Three Graces, ca. 1814-17
Venus and Mars, ca. 1816
Herm, ca. 1819
Theseus and the Centaur, ca. 1819
George Washington, ca. 1820
Venus Italica, ca. 1822-23
Monument to Canova in the Basilica di Santa Maria Gloriosa dei Frar
Napoleon as Mars the Peacemaker, Apsley House, London
Perseus Triumphant
Terpsichore Lyran
The Penitent Magdalene, Palazzo Doria-Tursi, Genoa

 

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