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Informative Press Releases for Travel
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A journey through Neapolitan Still Life of the 17th century will
be held at the Galerie Canesso in Paris, France, from September 26 to October 28
2007. The exhibition will bring together a unique collection of paintings, many of which
have never been exhibited before and will be on loan from
Recognised internationally as one of the
most important dealers in Italian art from the 15th to
18th centuries, Maurizio Canesso have been a highly significant
presence at various events in recent years. For example, he unveiled a major
discovery at the Fine Art Fair in New
York in 2001 - Saint Jean the Baptist in the Wilderness by Tanzio da
Varallo. He repeated the feat in 2004 with the impressive exhibition of ten
paintings by Luca Cambiaso (including three rediscovered "nocturnes") at the TEFAF Maastricht art fair, which
preceded the major exhibition devoted to the artist in the autumn of 2006 at the
Blanton Museum of Art in Austin and
L'Oeil Gourmand
- A Journey through Neapolitan Still Life of the 17th century : An exceptional
non-selling exhibition organised by the
Still life paintings were very popular among
collectors in the 17th century. By recreating a themed collection of
still lives, Maurizio Canesso hopes to inspire today's collectors with the same
enthusiasm. The exhibition is sponsored by the Italian Embassy in
The rise of Neapolitan still life painting
The still life genre flourished under the
influence of the Neapolitan school during the 17th century. Its sheer
variety reflected
One of the aims of this exhibition is to give art lovers a better understanding of still life painting where colour and richness, abundance and elegance compete for attention. The characteristics expressed by this harvest from land and sea are arranged in such a way as the viewer might discover birds (as in the two paintings by Paolo Porpora, from Dr. Vittorio Di Capua's collection), landscapes (the two works by Luca Forte from the Cei Collection in Florence provide excellent examples) or domestic kitchen scenes (G. B. Recco de Catania formerly in the Mendola collection).
In
An exceptional exhibition supported by
This exhibition is organised in close
collaboration with Professor Nicola Spinosa of the Capodimonte Museum in Naples
and the Ministero per i Beni e le Attivit Culturali, which has kindly loaned two
paintings, the famous Morning Glories and Guelder Roses by Andrea
Belvedere and a work by Guiseppe Ruoppolo from the Duca di Martina collection.
The ministry also authorised the loan of still life works from the Banco di
Napoli collection, which are conserved at the
The exhibition will show works by the
following artists, all of whom give their own unique interpretation of the
Neapolitan Still Life: Giovan Battista Recco (1615-1660) and Giuseppe Recco
(1634-1695), Luca Forte, Paolo Porpora (1617-1670/80), Giovan Battista Ruoppolo
(1629-1693), Giuseppe Ruoppolo (? - 1710), and Giovanni Quinsa (
Works on display
Examples of work on display will include Paulo Porpora's
Forest Floor, depicting
Several works depicting fish by Giuseppe
Recco, one of the seminal artists of 17th-century Neapolitan
still life painting, have passed through
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