Rinaldo and Armida
Primary
Giovanni Battista Gaulli (Baciccio)
(Genoa, Italy, 1639–Rome, Italy, 1709)
NationalityItalian, Europe
Datecirca 1680-1685
MediumOil on canvas
DimensionsCanvas: 15 x 19 in. (38.1 x 48.3 cm)
Credit LineBlanton Museum of Art, The University of Texas at Austin, The Suida-Manning Collection, 2017.1141
Keywords
Rights Statement
Collection AreaEuropean Painting and Sculpture
Object number2017.1141
On View
Not on viewIn a passage from Tarquato Tasso’s late 16th-century epic poem Gerusalemme liberata [Jerusalem Freed], the sorceress Armida puts the Christian hero Rinaldo to sleep in order to kill him, instead falls in love and instructs her nymphs to carry him to her palace. Reflecting the triumph of beauty and romantic love over rational resolve, the passage was a frequent subject of Baroque painting. Here it receives appropriately lyrical and enthralling expression. The style is that of Baciccio’s maturity, with its foreshortenings more pronounced, its rhythms more insistent, its palette even more coordinated than in the adjacent Study for ‘Justice, Peace, and Truth’. Although the scale and the approximate handling indicate that this painting was a preparatory sketch, and the literary subject corresponds to others fully developed by Baciccio, the composition is not known in any other version.
Exhibitions
Giovanni Battista Piazzetta
1739-1744