Spanish school; c. 1800.
"Allegory of the monarchy".
Oil on canvas.
Measurements: 64 x 52,5 cm; 81 x 68 cm (frame).
Open live auction
DESCRIPTION
Spanish school; c. 1800.
"Allegory of the monarchy".
Oil on canvas.
Measurements: 64 x 52.5 cm; 81 x 68 cm (frame).
The scene participates fully of the late baroque and academicist visual culture of the late eighteenth century, a time when the allegorical painting recovered a significant role as an instrument of dynastic propaganda and moral exaltation of power. The main figure appears dressed in a white tunic of delicate transparencies and a wide red cloak that spills on the floor with a marked scenographic effect. Reclining in a serene and contemplative attitude, she holds her arm above her head in a pose of clear classicist roots, while the lion, located in the foreground, reinforces the symbolic meaning of the composition. This animal, associated since ancient times with monarchy, justice and the vigilance of legitimate power, acquires here a heraldic and allegorical function that transforms the scene into an idealized representation of the Crown or the Nation protected by celestial virtues.In the upper area, two female figures emerge among dark vapors and barely hinted architectures. Their undulating movements and the diagonal disposition of their bodies generate an ascending rhythm that contrasts the earthly space with the upper allegorical sphere. One of them seems to bear attributes linked to enlightened government or wisdom, while the other participates in the theatrical dynamism typical of the triumphal allegories of the eighteenth century.
From the stylistic point of view, the painting reveals an interesting synthesis between the last echoes of the Spanish decorative baroque and the new neoclassical trends spread around the Academy of San Fernando during the reign of Charles IV. The warm and deep chromatism, dominated by fiery reds, golden browns and dark glazes, still maintains a sensibility inherited from the Baroque tradition of Madrid. However, the idealized anatomies, the linear elegance of the profiles and the compositional serenity indicate a progressive assimilation of academicist and classicist models.
The work can be related to the wide repertoire of monarchical allegories developed in Spain during the final decades of the 18th century, especially those destined for palace decorative programs or official celebrations linked to the exaltation of the Bourbon Crown. In this context, allegorical painting functioned as a sophisticated political language capable of translating abstract concepts into images easily recognizable to the educated spectator, and the composition shows affinities with certain models of Madrid painting from the transition between Baroque and Neoclassicism, perceptible in the combination of theatricality and academic refinement.
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