Italian or Majorcan school; end of the XVII century.
"Vase".
Oil on canvas. Relined.
It presents faults and restorations.
Measurements: 61 x 102 cm.
Open live auction
DESCRIPTION
Italian or Majorcan school; late seventeenth century.
"Vase".
Oil on canvas. Relined.
It presents faults and restorations.
Measurements: 61 x 102 cm.
In this still life the artist presents to the spectator a whole display of visual resources, by concentrating numerous disciplines in a single scene. The left zone of the composition presents a closed background decorated with an ornamented vase, in which a number and varied group of all kinds of flowers are displayed. These have been portrayed in an exuberant way, that is to say, in their greatest splendor. The right side of the work opens to the outside, revealing a landscape that develops in planes. In the foreground, the presence of several pomegranates and behind them we can appreciate a large landscape dominated by a fountain and trees in the distance.
The Mallorcan school of still lifes shows a strong influence of the Valencian school, although it had its own personality and must have enjoyed a certain importance, given the number of works that have survived to the present day. It developed mainly from the late seventeenth century and during the eighteenth century, from the appearance of the figure of Guillermo Mesquida (1625-1747), which will raise the level of Mallorcan painting. He was the most famous painter of the Balearic Baroque and absolute dominator of the artistic panorama between the end of the XVII and the first half of the XVIII. He was an excellent painter of still lifes, although we do not preserve today not a single one of them that we can attribute to him with absolute certainty. His biographers indicate that he was a disciple in Rome of the Italian Carlos Marata, a painter who had great influence in the development of still life, since he collaborated with numerous specialists of this genre. Mesquida represented in his works fruits, animals and flowers, and founded in Mallorca a workshop in which numerous works would be made, some of which are still preserved today. His style would have been characterized by a great chromatic richness and a clear ostentatiousness and abundance of fruit and floral elements, traits that would be inherited by his followers of the Mallorcan school. Thanks to Mesquida's influence, the Mallorcan still life painters picked up Italian elements, especially Neapolitan and Roman, always combined with the influence of the Valencian school.
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