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View of the gulf with ruins

Maria Luigia Raggi XVIII sec. d.C./ seconda metà

The nucleus with the series of the Paesaggi d'invenzione (Invention Landscapes), of which the present work is also a part, relates to the Genoese painter Maria Luigia Raggi, identified in the past with the conventional name “Master of the Capricci di Prato”.
Of noble origins, she was destined for life as a nun in the convent of the Incarnazione in Genoa, taking the name Sister Celeste.
 

Technical information

Author
Maria Luigia Raggi
Title
View of the gulf with ruins
Date
XVIII sec. d.C./ seconda metà
Material and technique
Tempera on paper
Size
16,8x24 cm
Location
Palazzo Pretorio Museum
Second Floor, Mezzanine
Sister Celeste a.k.a. Maria Luigia Raggi was a gifted female personality, specialising in idealised views that were popular with the foreigners who stopped in Rome during the Grand Tour. Daughter of Marquis Giovanni Antonio Raggi and Maria Brignole Sale, this noblewoman of Genoese origin was a cultured amateur painter. Recently, scholar Consuelo Lollobrigida (2012) has reconstructed her life as a miniaturist painter recluse in the Genoese convent of the Turchine nuns, attributing around 90 tempera paintings to her. In 1781, Raggi fled to Rome, as life in the cloister had become unbearable for her, and found refuge and hospitality with a relative: here she would start painting Roman monuments set in often fantasy landscapes. Together with reading texts on Arcadia, this influenced her artistic inclination, so much so that even when she returned to the convent she continued to paint, as if seeking an escape from reality.
The views, always highly original, are characterised by clear, bright skies with wavy or irregular clouds and recall the pointillism of porcelain painting.
The reference models are the landscapes of Rome and the surrounding countryside, executed by 18th century French and Flemish artists.
 

Last update: 06 december 2024, 16:45

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