Master Paintings and Sculpture Part II

Master Paintings and Sculpture Part II

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 430. Head of a bearded man in a yellow robe and a blue cap, wearing a gold chain.

Property from a California Private Collection

Giandomenico Tiepolo

Head of a bearded man in a yellow robe and a blue cap, wearing a gold chain

Auction Closed

January 27, 09:38 PM GMT

Estimate

80,000 - 120,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

Property from a California Private Collection

Giandomenico Tiepolo

Venice 1727 - 1804

Head of a bearded man in a yellow robe and a blue cap, wearing a gold chain


inscribed upper left: Aristotle

oil on canvas, laid on board

canvas: 22 by 18 in.; 55.9 by 45.7 cm.

framed: 27½ by 23½ in.; 69.9 by 59.7 cm. 

Private European collection, by the mid-20th century;
Thence by descent in the family.

This striking head of a bearded man is an important addition to the oeuvre of Giandomenico Tiepolo, a leading Rococo artist who captured the grandeur of Venetian society. The work forms part of a set of three recently rediscovered paintings all on offer from a private collection and all inscribed with the name of a Greek philosopher, the present lot identified as Aristotle.1 Several distinct elements unite these three heads: each is rendered with vitality and depth and Tiepolo’s masterful, energetic brushwork is beautifully preserved throughout. 


This head study forms part of a group of fantasy portraits of philosophers and exotic figures produced by Giandomenico Tiepolo and his father, Giambattista.2 All of comparable formats and dimensions, these images were meant to delight the viewer, as remarkably exemplified in this painting and the two others in the set. The man here possesses a strong presence. Costumed in a yellow robe and a blue cap, this man with a notably pensive gaze fills the canvas. The wispy bristles of his thick silver beard and eyebrows emphasize his furrowed brow and pursed lips. 


The genesis of this particular genre by the Tiepolos remains somewhat unclear, but it seems probable that at least some of the heads originated as part of a specific commission from Giambattista of circa 1757, before both father and son left Venice to work in Würzburg.3 Giandomenico went on to use his father’s compositions both as the basis for a series of engravings, the Raccolta di Teste, published in 1774, after his father’s death, and as inspiration for his own paintings. Many of Giandomenico’s painted heads of bearded men relate to the compositions represented in the Raccolta series, and the present canvas is no exception.

 

1. The two other paintings from this series, inscribed Demosthenes and Socrates, are offered as lots 157 and 158 in the Master Paintings Part 1 Sale (26 January 2023). 

2. Two comparable head studies by Giandomenico Tiepolo have recently been sold at Sotheby's New York on 30 January 2019 (for $471,000) and 1 February 2018 (for $447,000).   

3.  G. Knox, Domenico Tiepolo: Raccolta di teste, Udine 1970.