
Tarquin and Lucretia
Giuseppe Maria Crespi·c. 1695/1700
Historical Context
Crespi's Tarquin and Lucretia, painted around 1695-1700, depicts the ancient Roman narrative of the rape of Lucretia by Prince Tarquin — an act that led to the overthrow of the Roman monarchy and the establishment of the Republic. Crespi treats this dramatic classical subject with his characteristic combination of physical intensity and warm, atmospheric color. The painting reflects the continued relevance of classical exempla in Italian Baroque culture.
Technical Analysis
Crespi's oil-on-canvas technique renders the dramatic confrontation with characteristic warm, dark tonality and bold chiaroscuro. The figures are modeled with powerful physicality, while the loose, expressive brushwork creates an atmosphere of violent urgency.
Provenance
Possibly Palazzo Barbazza, Bologna, by 1739 until at least the 1760s.[1] Probably Duke Albert von Sachsen-Teschen [1738 1822], Bratislava, Brussels, and Vienna, by 1768 [as by Mattia Preti].[2] (Guillaume Verbelen, Brussels); (his sale, Brussels, 8 October 1833, no. 148, as Mattia Preti). J.J. Chapuis [d. 1865], Brussels; (his sale, De Donker and Vergote, Brussels, 4 December 1865 and days following, no. 320, as by Mattia Preti).[3] (M.A. Almas, Paris, 1937).[4] (Le Bouheler, Paris); purchased 1938 by the Samuel H. Kress Foundation, New York;[5] gift 1952 to NGA. [1] Giampietro Zanotti, _Storia dell'Accademia Clementina di Bologna_, 2 vols., Bologna, 1739: 2:58; Marcello Oretti, "Le pitture...della Città di Bologna", 3 vols., Biblioteca Comunale, Bologna, MS B104, in _Marcello Oretti e il patrimonio artistico privato bolognese. (Documenti 22)_, edited by Emilia Calbi and Daniela Scaglietti Kelescian, Bologna, 1984: 87. [2] According to the Verbelen and Chapuis sale catalogues. Albert's drawing of the pendant listed in those catalogues as also from his collection, _Ulysses Abducting Andromache's Son Astyanax_, is dated 1768 and bears an inscription attributing the painting to Mattia Preti. This drawing was engraved in 1778 by Jacob Schmuzer: _200 Jahre Albertina: Herzog Albert von Sachsen-Teschen und seine Kunstsammlung_, Exh. cat. Graphische Sammlung Albertina, 2 vols., Vienna, 1969: 1:nos. 76-77. The _Hecuba Blinding Polymnestor_ in the Musées Royaux des Beaux-Arts, Brussels, often suggested as a pendant to the NGA _Lucretia_, also came from Albert von Sachsen-Teschen's collection according to Eduard Fétis, _Catalogue descriptif et historique du Musée Royal de Belgique_, Brussels, 1864: 370. Fétis stated that the painting, acquired by the museum in 1828, was sold at the public sale of Albert's collection along with two other works by Preti bought by a Brussels collector, presumably the _Ulysses_ and _Lucretia_ in Verbelen's sale. No catalogue of Albert's sale has been located. (The reference to Fétis was provided by H. Pauwels, Conservateur en chef of the Musées Royaux, letter of 14 May 1985, NGA curatorial files.) [3] The description of the _Lucretia_ in the Chapuis sale catalogue corresponds exactly to the NGA painting; the dimensions given (190 x 194 cm) are somewhat wider, but the NGA painting has been cut down on both sides. [4] Paul Fierens, Musées Royaux des Beaux-Arts (letter of 3 December 1948, NGA curatorial files), refers to a note in the files of the Musées Royaux indicating that a _Tarquin and Lucretia_ measuring 195 x 172 cm was offered for sale in 1937 by M.A. Almas, Paris, who considered it the pendant to the Brussels _Hecuba_. [5] According to Fern Rusk Shapley, _Paintings from the Samuel H. Kress Collection: Italian Schools XVI-SVIII Century_, London, 1973: 101; and Fern Rusk Shapley, _Catalogue of Italian Paintings_, 2 vols., Washington, D.C., 1979: 1:146. See also The Kress Collection Digital Archive, https://kress.nga.gov/Detail/objects/2031.

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