Wednesday, December 9, 2015

Tiepolo Punchinellos

after Giambattista Tiepolo
Punchinellos cooking
etching
1751
Victoria & Albert Museum

after Giambattista Tiepolo
Punchinellos cooking
etching
1751
Victoria & Albert Museum

There is a pair of Punchinello etchings in the Victoria & Albert Museum based on designs by the best-known and worthiest master of Venetian rococo, Giambattista Tiepolo (1696-1770). The active, curious and unsmiling Punchinello character was firmly embedded in the Tiepolo family repertoire. Giambattista's son Giandomenico Tiepolo (1727-1804) made scores of Punchinello drawings in brown wash toward the end of his own life.  In retirement, drawing for personal pleasure, Giandomenico could afford to ignore the arrival of the new century when the age of fantasy and improvisation he had known would be replaced by the far grimmer age of machinery and systems.  

Giandomenico Tiepolo
Punchinello's pregnant mother
c. 1800
drawing
Metropolitan Museum

Giandomenico Tiepolo
Newborn Punchinello in his parents' bed
c. 1800
drawing
Metropolitan Museum

Giandomenico Tiepolo
Punchinellos removing dead chickens from a well
c. 1800
drawing
Metropolitan Museum

Giandomenico Tiepolo
Punchinellos chopping down a tree
c. 1800
drawing
Metropolitan Museum

Giandomenico Tiepolo
Punchinellos outside a circus
c. 1800
drawing
Metropolitan Museum

Giandomenico Tiepolo
Punchinello flogged
c. 1800
drawing
Metropolitan Museum

Giandomenico Tiepolo
Punchinello as dressmaker
c. 1800
drawing
Metropolitan Museum

Giandomenico Tiepolo
Punchinello as tailor's assistant
c. 1800
drawing
Metropolitan Museum

Giandomenico Tiepolo
Punchinellos with a donkey ridden by a monkey carrying a dead chicken
c. 1800
drawing
British Museum 

Giandomenico Tiepolo
Burial of Punchinello
c. 1800
drawing
Metropolitan Museum