Show me:
and
Clear all filters

  • 33 items
  • 25 items Explore
  • 89 items
  • 3,547 items Explore
  • 97 items Explore
  • 14 items
  • 4 items
  • 220 items
  • 13,930 items Explore
  • 211 items Explore
  • 1,225 items Explore
  • 8,754 items Explore
  • 5,137 items Explore
  • 62 items Explore
  • 165 items Explore
  • 13,188 items Explore
  • 13,620 items Explore
  • 4,802 items Explore
  • 1 items
  • 5 items
  • 149 items Explore
  • 2,002 items Explore
  • 4,758 items Explore
  • 438 items Explore
  • 267 items
  • 105 items Explore
  • 19,978 items Explore
  • 36 items Explore
  • 1,915 items Explore
  • 1,083 items Explore
  • 5 items
  • 2,250 items Explore
  • 455 items Explore
  • 918 items Explore
  • 1 items Explore
  • 5 items
  • 7 items
  • 20,392 items Explore
  • 800 items Explore
  • 19 items
  • 73 items Explore
  • 33 items
  • 792 items
  • 20 items
  • 4 items
  • 26 items
  • 61 items
  • 28 items
  • 320 items Explore
  • 6 items
  • 44 items Explore
  • 1 items
  • 2 items
  • 2 items
  • 8 items
  • 122 items Explore
  • 119 items
  • 1 items
  • 926 items Explore
  • 724 items
  • 95 items
  • 38,156 items Explore
  • 1 items
  • 3,880 items Explore
  • 1,533 items Explore
  • 403 items
  • 125 items Explore
  • 10,752 items Explore
  • 9,683 items Explore
  • 4 items
  • 1 items
  • 38 items
  • 3 items
  • 4 items
  • 6,781 items Explore
  • 2 items
  • 7,365 items Explore
  • 4,968 items Explore
  • 2,005 items Explore
  • 1,195 items Explore
  • 24,465 items Explore
  • 3,660 items Explore
  • 17 items
  • 5 items
  • 334 items
  • 107 items
  • 1 items
  • 3,374 items Explore
  • 23 items Explore
  • 374 items Explore
  • 796 items Explore
  • 1,087 items Explore
  • 514 items Explore
  • 1,519 items Explore
  • 89 items
  • 125 items Explore
  • 6,953 items Explore
  • 76 items
  • 108 items
  • 4 items
  • 2 items
  • 63 items
  • 2 items
  • 2,931 items Explore
  • 1,344 items Explore
  • 203 items
  • 90 items
  • 22,306 items Explore
  • 1,347 items Explore
  • 138 items
  • 848 items Explore
  • 32 items
  • 1 items
  • 122 items Explore
  • 40 items
  • 20 items
  • 252 items
  • 314 items
  • 687 items Explore
  • 344 items Explore
  • 2,429 items
  • 2,535 items
  • 3 items
  • 1 items
  • 4,395 items Explore
  • 40,361 items Explore
  • 1 items
  • 3,293 items Explore
  • 275 items Explore
  • 8,896 items Explore
  • 31 items
  • 25 items
  • 304 items Explore
  • 776 items Explore
  • 3 items
  • 65 items
  • 161 items
  • 50 items
  • 52 items
  • 24,192 items Explore
  • 916 items
  • 65 items
  • 22,650 items Explore
  • 2 items
  • 2,336 items Explore
  • 1 items
  • 1,028 items Explore
  • 4 items
  • 759 items
  • 499 items
  • 4 items
  • 3,310 items Explore
  • 179 items
  • 59 items
  • 455 items Explore
  • 3 items
  • 21 items
  • 90 items Explore
  • 76 items
  • 281 items Explore
  • 1 items
  • 6 items
  • 128 items
  • 295 items
  • 447 items
  • 287 items
  • 1 items
  • 906 items Explore
  • 276 items Explore
  • 505 items
  • 11,300 items Explore
  • 755 items Explore
  • 6,025 items Explore
  • 8,378 items Explore
  • 27 items
  • 1 items
  • 5,972 items Explore
  • 4 items
  • 3,725 items Explore
  • 9,182 items Explore
  • 7,886 items Explore
  • 182 items
  • 19 items
  • 144 items
  • 7 items
  • 854 items Explore
  • 19 items
  • 8 items
  • 1,096 items Explore
  • 270 items
  • 1 items
  • 2,120 items
  • 1 items
  • 3,543 items Explore
  • 695 items Explore
  • 18 items
  • 134 items
  • 6,738 items Explore
  • 95 items
  • 18,936 items Explore
  • 3,137 items Explore
  • 3 items
  • 7 items
  • 11,005 items Explore
  • 37 items
  • 2 items
  • 21,447 items Explore
  • 35 items
  • 13,324 items Explore
  • 3,460 items Explore
  • 5,644 items Explore
  • 33 items
  • 52,200 items Explore
  • 41 items
  • 646 items Explore
  • 417 items
  • 26,949 items Explore
  • 216 items
  • 3 items
  • 1 items
  • 35 items
  • 27 items
  • 445 items Explore
  • 636 items
  • 217 items Explore
  • 13 items
  • 13,766 items Explore
  • 1,361 items Explore
  • 3 items
  • 10,260 items
  • 9 items
  • 10 items
  • 14 items
  • 25 items
  • 1 items
  • 4,537 items Explore
  • 913 items Explore
  • 3 items
  • 1 items
  • 1 items
  • 318 items
  • 505 items Explore
  • 42 items
  • 2,289 items Explore
  • 1,668 items Explore
  • 15 items
  • 1,877 items Explore
  • 150 items
  • 80 items
  • 766 items Explore
  • 3,094 items Explore
  • 40 items
  • 17 items
  • 12 items
  • 10,670 items Explore
  • 23,782 items Explore
  • 1 items
  • 3 items
  • 1 items
  • 41 items
  • 1,374 items
  • 177 items Explore
  • 8 items
  • 92 items
  • 1 items
  • 13,586 items Explore
  • 3,642 items Explore
  • 2,903 items Explore
  • 4,534 items Explore
  • 22 items
  • 30 items
  • 6,911 items Explore
  • 4,842 items Explore
  • 2,300 items Explore
  • 2,820 items Explore
  • 2 items
  • 1,899 items Explore
  • 191 items
  • 223 items Explore
  • 421 items Explore
  • 6,111 items Explore
  • 8,729 items Explore
  • 1,837 items Explore
  • 3 items
  • 1 items
  • 5,943 items Explore
  • 3,354 items Explore
  • 11,134 items Explore
  • 1 items
  • 84 items
  • 11 items
  • 2,515 items Explore
  • 7 items
  • 24 items
  • 51 items
  • 6 items
  • 1 items
  • 4,297 items Explore
  • 611 items Explore
  • 75 items
  • 17 items
  • 155 items Explore
  • 1 items
  • 95 items Explore
  • 458 items
  • 1 items
  • 996 items Explore
  • 3,614 items Explore
  • 4 items
  • 5 items
  • 9,762 items Explore
  • 48 items Explore
  • 3 items
  • 7 items
  • 42 items
  • 3 items
  • 13,808 items Explore
  • 1,167 items Explore
  • 92 items
  • 10,569 items Explore
  • 1,920 items
  • 18 items
  • 6,139 items Explore
  • 21 items
  • 12,949 items Explore
  • 1,418 items Explore
  • 8 items
  • 6,176 items Explore
  • 14,888 items Explore
  • 4 items
  • 1,667 items Explore
  • 181 items Explore
  • 4 items
  • 16 items
  • 5,683 items Explore
  • 12,284 items Explore
  • 48 items
  • 25 items
  • 2 items
  • 3 items
  • 7,191 items Explore
  • 357 items Explore
  • 13 items
  • 6 items
  • 103 items Explore
  • 7 items
  • 5 items
  • 485 items
  • 688 items Explore
  • 8,409 items Explore
  • 58 items
  • 1 items
  • 7,347 items Explore
  • 5 items
  • 26 items
  • 4,742 items Explore
  • 428 items
  • 339 items Explore
  • 12,715 items Explore
  • 55 items
  • 20 items
  • 7 items
  • 4 items
  • 325 items Explore
  • 427 items
  • 458 items
  • 3,693 items Explore
  • 27 items
  • 1,237 items Explore
  • 2,503 items Explore
  • 1,287 items Explore
  • 36 items
  • 1,139 items Explore
  • 97 items Explore
  • 24 items
  • 229 items Explore
  • 80,462 items Explore
  • 1 items
  • 3,139 items Explore
  • 2,871 items Explore
  • 24 items
  • 5,352 items Explore
  • 1,831 items Explore
  • 4 items
  • 17,513 items Explore
  • 4,931 items Explore
  • 1 items
  • 7 items
  • 631 items Explore
  • 85 items
  • 31 items
  • 1 items
  • 76 items
  • 29 items
  • 86 items
  • 3 items
  • 1,176 items Explore
  • 109 items
  • 805 items
  • 13,210 items Explore
  • 27 items
  • 13 items
  • 1,710 items Explore
  • 217 items
  • 17,041 items Explore
  • 85 items
  • 17 items
  • 1 items
  • 8 items
  • 324 items
  • 2 items
  • 631 items Explore
  • 1,592 items Explore
  • 8 items
  • 1,130 items Explore
  • 388 items
  • 2 items
  • 355 items

Select a time period

Or choose a specific year

Clear all filters

Capriccio of Antique Ruins

attributed to Antonio Joli (Modena c.1700 – Naples 1777)

Category

Art / Oil paintings

Date

1748

Materials

Distemper on canvas

Measurements

2692 x 1372 mm (106 x 54 in)

Order this image

Collection

Shugborough Estate, Staffordshire

NT 1271506

Summary

Distemper on canvas, Capriccio of Antique Ruins, Italian (Bolognese) School, attributed to Antonio Joli (Modena 1700 – Naples 1777), before 1748. An architectural capriccio with the ruins of an ancient Roman building in a townscape, the arcades mounted with statuary modelled on the Abduction of a Sabine Woman by Giambologna (1529-1608). Figures converse in the foreground, seated among architectural rubble, sections of column and entablature. One of a series of eight architectural capricci in the dining-room of Shugborough Hall, inset into the walls and surrounded by gilt stucco frames attributed to Francesco Vassalli (fl. 1720-70). This picture is inset into the wall to the right of the bay window. For others in the set, see NT 1271507-12. This picture is the only one in the set attributed to Antonio Joli, on the basis of stylistic and material evidence; the rest are attributed to Pietro Paltronieri.

Full description

In the context of art, a capriccio (plural capricci) is an architectural fantasy picture, combining real and/or imaginary buildings in a landscape. This cycle of capricci reimagines the ruined architecture of antiquity in a fictive town, through which classical and contemporary figures roam. Different historical periods are deliberately juxtaposed, for example NT 1271510 features the remains of a colossal basilica with a gothic church in the background, while NT 1271505 shows an eighteenth-century traveller at a watering trough, before a man in classical armour. The eight capricci – which are of four different sizes – are known to have been in situ in the dining-room – then the drawing room – of Shugborough Hall by 1748, when they are mentioned in the travel journal of the Honorable Philip Yorke (1720–1790). His sister Elizabeth had married George Anson (1697-1762), younger brother of the connoisseur and collector of antique statuary Thomas Anson (1695-1773), who himself resided at Shugborough. Yorke writes: ‘from Ingestre we went to Mr Anson’s at Shugborough. He has added two Wings to his House. In one of Which is a fine Room of 38 x 24 (feet) with a large Bow Window in the middle, ornamented in Stuccoe, and with large Pictures of Architecture, Painted at Bologna’ (quoted in Godber 1968, p. 137). No artists are named, but a location of production is clearly stated. While there is no significant documentary evidence about the commissioning and attribution of the capriccio cycle, they are certainly Italian, or Italianate. Nevertheless, their traditional attribution was to the Scandinavian landscape and theatrical artist Nicholas Dall (d. 1776) who produced, in the late 1760s, decorations in the library, orangery (now demolished) as well as views of the house and grounds. Even contemporaries like William Gilpin, who saw Shugborough in 1772, ascribed them to him, writing that ‘The drawing room is hung with large ruins in distemper by Dahl [sic]’ (Gilpin cited in Laing 1993, p.228). On the basis of stylistic evidence, the attribution of the paintings to the Bolognese architectural painter Pietro Paltronieri, often called ‘Il Mirandolese’ (1673-1741), was first established by Alastair Laing in an article of 1993 (Alastair Laing, ‘O tempera, o mores!: The ruin paintings in the Dining Room at Shugborough’, Apollo, April 1993, vol. 137 pp. 227-232). In the mid-17th and 18th centuries Bologna was an important centre for theatre design and illusionistic decoration, owed largely to the prolific output of the Galli-Bibiena family of theatrical and architectural painters. In addition to Paltronieri, Laing identified the work of other artists in the cycle – a fairly common indicator of workshop practice. One of these may have been Vittorio Maria Bigari (Bologna 1692 - 1776), with whom Paltronieri collaborated on similar capricci which are today in the Museo Davia Bargellini, Bologna (see NT 1271510; Laing 1993, p. 231). Later additions were made to the two capricci either side of the chimneypiece (NT 1271508-9) when the drawing room was converted into a dining room in 1794. The Italian decorative painter Biagio Rebecca (1731-1808) was probably employed to expand both canvases, adding panels to the left side of the existing canvases and extending the design. Conservation of the capricci in 2018 resulted in the reattribution of one canvas in the cycle, NT 1271506, which had long-been considered inconsistent with the other seven (Laing 1993, p. 231). Technical analysis of paint samples taken during conservation revealed that the physical composition of the picture was different, from the application of paint layers to the brushwork, to the density of the canvas itself (Critchlow and Kukkonen Ltd., Condition Report, unpublished internal document, 2019). The architectural setting of NT 1271506 occurs, with minor variations, in three other known compositions by or attributed to the Italian view-painter Antonio Joli (1700-77), who was apprenticed to the Galli-Bibiena family of scenographic painters, and would have been familiar with work of Pietro Paltronieri (Laing 1993, p. 232, Hamilton Whatling 2020, pp. 9-10). The three works in question are each on the theme of the Massacre of the Innocents (Arisi 1986, p. 274, Toledano 2006, pp. 104-5, 107), and largely replicate, with differences in size and scale, the architecture seen in the Shugborough’s anomalous capriccio. An attribution to Joli has thus been proposed by author of the artist’s catalogue raisonné, Ralph Toledano (as the result of research conducted by Dr Jane Hamilton Whatling, 2020). Joli was a painter of stage sets in Modena, Perugia and Venice before moving, in 1744, to London, where he was employed as a scene painter at the King’s Theatre, Haymarket. He left London in 1749. The seven capricci that are ascribed to Paltronieri are his only known works in England. They were acquired – probably commissioned – by Thomas Anson in Italy, presumably during his Grand Tour (1723-5) or subsequent travels to the Levant (1734), Egypt (1740) and Europe (1748). Despite there being no archival evidence of Anson ever having visited Bologna, the size of the two largest pictures suggests that they were not produced speculatively, but rather to order. As Paltronieri died in 1741, the eighth canvas, attributable to Antonio Joli, if not painted in Italy, may instead have been produced in London. Materials Distemper is an aqueous paint, bound with a glue-size or casein (a bovine protein) binder. In the case of the Shugborough capricci, the dry pigments have been bound with glue-size, though many of the early retouchings are bound in casein. While the application of distemper directly onto plaster is not unknown in Britain, the survival of works where it has been applied to canvas is rare in England (other examples include a distemper on canvas by Spiridione Roma, c. 1770-1, at The Vyne, NT 719416, and arabesques brought to Kingston Lacy from the Palazzo Contarini, Venice, NT 1254999). This is despite the fact that it was a widely used technique within the theatre. Prior to paint application, the capricci had a ground layer applied to them, containing gypsum. Gypsum is calcium sulphate and is commonly found in grounds of paintings made in southern European countries, south of the Alps. This seems to confirm the notion that the capricci originated in Italy (Hannah Tempest, ‘Analysis of samples’, unpublished internal document, 2019). Text adapted from Dr Jane Hamilton Whatling, 'Report on Art-historical research undertaken into the Architectural Capricci at Shugborough Hall, Staffordshire, Great Britain', unpublished document, February 2020

Provenance

Accepted by H.M. Treasury in lieu of estate duties following the death of Thomas Edward Anson (1883 – 1960) the 4th Earl of Lichfield and given on loan to The National Trust for display at Shugborough Hall in March 1966. Transferred as a gift to The National Trust by H.M. Treasury on the 30th October 1984.

Makers and roles

attributed to Antonio Joli (Modena c.1700 – Naples 1777), artist previously catalogued as attributed to Pietro Paltronieri, called Il Mirandolese dalle Prospettive (1673 - Bologna 1741), artist

References

Croft-Murray 1962-1970: Edward Croft-Murray, Decorative Painting in England, 1537 - 1837 (2 vols), 1962-1970, vol. II, 1970, pp. 24 and 96-7 and pls. 37 & 38. Godber 1968: Joyce Godber, ‘The Hon. Philip Yorke, “Memorandums of a Journey into Staffordshire”, 1748’, Publications of the Bedfordshire Historical Record Society, vol. XLVII, 1968 Arisi 1986: Ferdinando Arisi, Gian Paolo Panini e i fasti della Roma del ’700, Rome 1986 Bandera 1990: Maria Cristina Bandera, Pietro Paltronieri ‘Il Mirandolese’, Cassa di Risparmio di Mirandola, 1990 Laing 1993: Alastair Laing, ‘O tempera, o mores!: The ruin paintings in the Dining Room at Shugborough’, Apollo, April 1993, vol. 137 pp. 227-232 Toledano 2006: Ralph Toledano, Antonio Joli, Modena 1700 – 1777 Napoli, Turin 2006 Whatling 2020: Jane Hamilton Whatling, 'Report on Art-historical research undertaken into the Architectural Capricci at Shugborough Hall, Staffordshire, Great Britain', unpublished document, February 2020

View more details