School of Domenico Zapieri
"The death of St. Peter Martyr".
Oil on canvas. Relined.
Presents Italian frame of the eighteenth century.
Measurements: 90 x 60 cm; 102 x 72 cm (frame).
Open live auction
DESCRIPTION
School of DOMENICO ZAMPIERI, "DOMENICHINO" (Bologna, 1581-Naples, 1641).
"The death of St. Peter Martyr".
Oil on canvas. Relined.
Presents Italian frame of the eighteenth century.
Measurements: 90 x 60 cm; 102 x 72 cm (frame).
The present work faithfully follows the compositional and narrative model of the Martyrdom of St. Peter of Verona, painting by Domenichino, artistic name of Domenico Zampieri (Bologna, 1581 - Naples, 1641), between 1618 and 1621, now preserved in the Pinacoteca Nazionale di Bologna. The original composition represents the dramatic assassination of St. Peter of Verona, a Dominican friar, in a wooded area, the climax of which is the moment when the saint, mortally wounded, collapses while his assailants consummate his martyrdom; in the upper part, a group of angels descend carrying the crown and the palm, symbols of the spiritual triumph over death. The scene is articulated through a classical balance between violence and serenity, characteristic of Roman-Bolognese classicism, where the emotional intensity is modulated through a rigorous compositional construction and a landscape that frames and dignifies the sacrifice.
Domenichino, a central figure of the classicist baroque, initially trained with Denys Calvaert in his hometown and later entered the Accademia degli Incamminati of the Carracci. In 1601 he moved to Rome, joining the circle of Annibale Carracci and collaborating with artists such as Francesco Albani and Guido Reni, in an artistic environment that favored the study of the natural and the idealized recovery of the classical tradition. His early participation in the frescoes of the Farnese Palace, especially in the cycle of The Loves of the Gods, as well as his intervention in important ecclesiastical commissions in Rome and Grottaferrata, consolidated his reputation as a master of fresco painting and large narrative composition.
After the death of Annibale Carracci in 1609, Domenichino established himself as one of the leading exponents of the Bolognese school in Rome, producing cycles such as the scenes from the life of Saint Cecilia in San Luigi dei Francesi and multiple decorations in Roman churches. His style, characterized by structural clarity, the nobility of gestures and an idealized conception of the landscape, an aspect that would influence the later generation, including Claude Lorrain, reaches in the Martyrdom of St. Peter in Verona an exemplary synthesis between baroque drama and classical harmony.
Domenichino's critical fortune knew ups and downs during his lifetime, especially after some commissions in San Andreas della Valle, which prompted his move to Naples, where he continued to work until his death in 1641. Despite this, his artistic legacy was consolidated in Europe. In Spain, although his presence is limited, works preserved in the Museo del Prado, such as The Sacrifice of Isaac and Apparition of the Angels to St. Jerome, as well as a Head of the Baptist in the Royal Academy of Fine Arts of San Fernando, stand out.
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