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Source Description
This drawing was completed in preparation for the most prestigious religious commission of Giovanni Battista Piazzetta’s career, the ceiling painting of the <em>Glory of St. Dominic</em> for the church of SS. Giovanni e Paolo in Venice. Both the finished painting, which depicts St. Dominic’s arrival in heaven amid a thundery vortex, and Piazzetta’s study for the angel, who carries St. Dominic on a cloud, depart from Venetian tradition. To execute this airborne subject, he likely drew from wax or clay models suspended in midair in order to study the illusionistic <em>di sotto in su </em>(from below to above) perspective and the play of light found on the angel’s shadowed form. He worked out the angel’s twisting pose, imbuing it with a lively sense of movement, and accentuated the drapery’s folds with heavy lines as though considering their visibility from afar. There are only slight changes in the angel’s pose between this drawing and the completed painting. As few of Piazzetta’s preparatory studies for paintings exist, Cleveland’s sheet offers rare insight to the artist’s working methods.
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
117769
label
Studies of Hands Playing Instruments (verso)
core
obj
dtoType
drawing
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
117769
contentType
drawing
title
Studies of Hands Playing Instruments (verso)
description
This drawing was completed in preparation for the most prestigious religious commission of Giovanni Battista Piazzetta’s career, the ceiling painting of the <em>Glory of St. Dominic</em> for the church of SS. Giovanni e Paolo in Venice. Both the finished painting, which depicts St. Dominic’s arrival in heaven amid a thundery vortex, and Piazzetta’s study for the angel, who carries St. Dominic on a cloud, depart from Venetian tradition. To execute this airborne subject, he likely drew from wax or clay models suspended in midair in order to study the illusionistic <em>di sotto in su </em>(from below to above) perspective and the play of light found on the angel’s shadowed form. He worked out the angel’s twisting pose, imbuing it with a lively sense of movement, and accentuated the drapery’s folds with heavy lines as though considering their visibility from afar. There are only slight changes in the angel’s pose between this drawing and the completed painting. As few of Piazzetta’s preparatory studies for paintings exist, Cleveland’s sheet offers rare insight to the artist’s working methods.
date
1723–27
rights
CC0
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
wikidata
Q80012481
creators
1198
genreSpecific
Drawing
imageCount
1
source
import
dimensionsRaw
Sheet: 42.6 x 56.3 cm (16 3/4 x 22 3/16 in.)
cul
Italy, Venice
accession
1938.388.b
Source extras
tec
black chalk
tombstone
Studies of Hands Playing Instruments (verso), 1723–27. Giovanni Battista Piazzetta (Italian, 1682–1754). Black chalk; sheet: 42.6 x 56.3 cm (16 3/4 x 22 3/16 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Purchase from the J. H. Wade Fund, 1938.388.b
supportMaterials
description
blue laid paper
collection
DR - Italian
inscriptions
inscription
lower left, in red chalk: 17 [sideways] ; lower right, in graphite: Piazzetta
didYouKnow
The Venetian blue paper (<em>carta azzurra</em>) of this sheet was the preferred medium for preparatory drawings among artists in Venice at the time this drawing was made.
creditline
Purchase from the J. H. Wade Fund
updatedAt
2026-05-29 06:06:01.248000
sourceId
117769
dept
Drawings
coll
DR - Italian
med
black chalk
creatorTags
male
thumbnail_url
image_url
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
90531834d967976f