Born: 1560 in Bologna, Italy
Died: 1609 in Roma, Italy
Carracci. Family of Bolognese painters, the brothers Agostino
(1557-1602) and Annibale (1560-1609) and their cousin Lodovico (1555-1619), who
were prominent figures at the end of the 16th century in the movement against
the prevailing Mannerist artificiality of Italian painting.
They worked together early in their careers, and it is not easy to distinguish
their shares in, for example, the cycle of frescos in the Palazzo Fava in
Bologna (c.1583-84). In the early 1580s they opened a private teaching academy,
which soon became a center for progressive art. It was originally called the
Accademia dei Desiderosi ('Desiderosi' meaning 'desirous of fame and learning'),
but later changed its name to Academia degli Incamminati (Academy of the
Progressives). In their teaching they laid special emphasis on drawing from the
life (all three were outstanding graphic artists) and clear draughtsmanship
became a quality particularly associated with artists of the Bolognese School,
notably Domenichino and Reni, two of the leading members of the following
generation who trained with the Carracci.
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| Butcher's Shop
(1580s) Oil on canvas, 185 x 266 cm Christ Church Picture Gallery, Oxford |
Using the language of the Bible, theologians have referred to
the dangers of the consumer habits which emanate from such abundant supply of
products as 'temptations of the flesh,' and these are quite often the theme of
rather graphic paintings of butchers' shops. Like Aertsen and Beuckelaer's art,
in the 16th century they are not yet pure still-lifes, although they do display
the tendency towards materialization inherent in this genre.
In Annibale Carracci's painting with this motif, the characters are facing the
viewer as if they were on stage. On the right a butcher's servant is dragging
along a freshly cut ox or cow, the spine and innards visible as in an anatomical
longitudinal section, which he is about to hang on a hook. Another servant is
kneeling beside a sheep that is lying on the ground, its legs tied, which he is
about to slaughter. A third servant is holding a pair of scales, adjusting its
weights. In the background, a butcher is taking a hook off the ceiling. Goods
are exhibited in front of him, and an old woman is seen stealing a piece of meat
without being noticed by the butcher. On the left a rather foolish-looking man,
dressed in a dandy-like manner with a feathered hat, tattered, baggy yellow
trousers and a huge codpiece, can be seen rummaging awkwardly in his purse. The
actions of the characters show that the painting is a thematic representation of
a literary motif from a picaresque tale.
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| Fishing
(before 1595) Oil on canvas, 136 x 253 cm Musée du Louvre, Paris |
This painting and its companion piece, The Hunting was executed by Carracci in his period in Bologna. At this time he was extremely interested in landscape, and his experiments are a foreshadowing of Poussin's classical compositions; but in these pictures he is exploring in a different direction, in the tradition of Bassani, whose studios continued to turn out landscapes which were prized all over Europe. This painting and its companion piece, The Hunting was executed by Carracci in his period in Bologna. At this time he was extremely interested in landscape, and his experiments are a foreshadowing of Poussin's classical compositions; but in these pictures he is exploring in a different direction, in the tradition of Bassani, whose studios continued to turn out landscapes which were prized all over Europe.