:The popular adage "bigger is better" is put to the test by
"Intimate Visions: Small-Scale European Paintings of the
Fifteenth to Nineteenth Centuries," on view at the Wadsworth
Atheneum Museum of Art, January 15-September 11.
The exhibition showcases some 70 paintings in the Atheneum's
permanent collection that have rarely been shown in the museum's
grand galleries due to their petite size.
Grouped chronologically, these works span a variety of subject
matter. Religious themes pervade the earliest paintings of the
Italian and Northern schools, including the rare, late Fifteenth
Century French "Annunciation and Pietà" as well as the
"Annunciation" by Caracciolo and the recently restored Francesco
Francia "Madonna and Child with St Francis."
Within the small-scale format, the most popular subject
throughout Europe was the still life, with its detailed
depictions of insects, birds, flowers and fruit. Chief among the
splendid examples on view is "Still Life with Hourglass" by the
Seventeenth Century Dutch master Gerrit Dou.
Genre scenes were popular in the Eighteenth Century, and as the
form evolved, it encompassed increasingly modern settings and
subject matter; Louis Léopold Boilly's "The Mockery" as well as a
pair of paintings by Giovanni Battista Piazzetta, a charming boy
and girl filled with sexual innuendo. Humor and careful
observation of human behavior are evident in Jehan-Georges
Vibert's "The Schism" and in Jean Béraud's treatment of a typical
urban view in "Paris Street Scene."
Nineteenth Century painting is dominated by landscapes and this
exhibition shows fine examples by Camille Corot and other
Barbizon masters Henri Julien Rousseau, Diaz de la Peña, and
Charles François Daubigny.
The Wadsworth Atheneum is at 600 Main Street. For information,
860-838-4058 or wadsworthatheneum.org.