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Rome: Nature and the Ideal at Prado Museum

Rome: Nature and the Ideal at Prado Museum

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5 July to 25 September 2011 – Exhibition co-ordinated by: Réunion des Musées Nationaux (París), Musée du Louvre and the Museo Nacional del Prado (Madrid)

Curated by Andrés Úbeda de los Cobos, Chief Curator of Italian and French Painting, Museo Nacional del Prado

Featuring more than 100 works, the exhibition Rome: Nature and the Ideal. Landscapes 1600-1650 will be exhibited at the Museo del Prado after its showing at the Grand Palais in Paris. The exhibition project is one of the most ambitious to be undertaken by the Prado, which has worked closely with the Musée du Louvre. Works have been loaned from fifty different sources in order to offer the most important selection of landscape of this period to be exhibited to date. This important group of works will also analyse the evolution of the genre from its first flowering to its maturity through figures of the stature of Velázquez, Claude Lorraine and Poussin.

Until the late 16th century, landscape was considered a minor artistic genre by art theoreticians and was on occasions treated as a speciality confined to the painters who had moved from northern Europe to Italy. Various different traditions co-existed in Rome, together constituting the most important trends within this genre in the 16th century, namely the archaeological landscapes of Polidoro da Caravaggio and Raphael and the more naturalistic, poetic canvases of Giorgione and Titian, whose works some of the great Roman collectors were proud to display.

It was Annibale Carracci who developed the prototype of the harmoniously structured landscape of a kind that came to be described as “classical” by the end of the 17th century. Carracci’s example was developed by his Bolognese followers including Domenichino and Francesco Albani, who further enhanced the genre with literary references. In addition, Paul Bril formulated new typologies such as the marine landscape, genre scenes of fishermen and topographically accurate landscapes. As a result, Bril and other artists from Antwerp such as Jan Brueghel and Sebastian Vrancx updated the 16th-century Antwerp tradition of landscape through contact with the natural environment of Italy.

Another important factor in the development of the genre was the presence of the German painter Adam Elsheimer in Rome from 1610 to 1620. Elsheimer introduced small figures and other elements such as literary references into his landscapes, which have a dramatic tension normally associated with history painting. His enthusiasm for atmospheric effects and different types of light constituted an important precedent for the naturalist landscape painting of Bartholomeus Breenbergh, Cornelis van Poelenburgh and Filippo Napoletano, who in turn inspired artists such as Carlo Saraceni and Orazio Gentileschi, all present in the exhibition with key works from their respective oeuvres.

Within the exhibition the two sections devoted to Claude Lorraine and Nicolas Poussin are particularly important. Both were outstanding representatives of the genre and their works marked the transition of landscape painting from that of a minor genre to a prestigious and widely acknowledged one with particular characteristics that defined its uniqueness. Alongside their works are paintings by other French artists such as Jean Lemaire, who rapidly became sought after on the art market for his views with classical ruins, and Gaspard Dughet, whose proto-romantic visions would be extremely influential for later landscape painters such as Courbet.

The two venues in which Rome. Nature and the Ideal will be held (Galeries nationales du Grand Palais and the Museo del Prado) will present an almost identical version of the exhibition with regard to its content aside from the drawings, which will vary significantly for conservation reasons. Overall, the principal difference lies in the inclusion in the Madrid version of the exhibition of a section that focuses on Philip IV’s commission of a large series of landscapes for the decoration of the Buen Retiro Palace in Madrid. The project involved the participation of the leading artists resident in Rome between 1635 and 1640, whose influence would be crucial for the future development of the genre.

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