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Bellona

Primary (Venice, Italy, 1675–1741)
NationalityItalian, Europe
Datecirca 1713-1714
MediumOil on canvas
DimensionsCanvas: 35 1/2 x 29 in. (90.2 x 73.7 cm)
Credit LineBlanton Museum of Art, The University of Texas at Austin, The Suida-Manning Collection, 2017.1282
Collection AreaEuropean Painting and Sculpture
Object number2017.1282
On View
On view
Locations
  • exhibition  BMA, Gallery, A2
Label Text
Pellegrini represents 18th-century Venetian painting at its most exuberant. He was initially trained in Milan with the idiosyncratic Paolo Pagani, but his style is really an exaggeration of the sensuous and decorative aspects of Sebastiano Ricci. In Pellegrini’s works, the drawing is broad and soft, the palette is fiery and luminous, and the paint itself is dense and fluid. Defying gravity, bordering on the caricatural, this painterly virtuosity was a tremendous success across Europe, with Pellegrini called to execute significant fresco cycles and numerous canvases in England, France, and Germany. Bellona is a typically glorious if basically hollow exercise in this purest kind of painting. Already freed from Ricci’s more differentiated handling, but not yet fully dissolved in its drawing and atmospheric in its color, the picture probably dates from the time of Pellegrini’s collaboration with Antonio Bellucci, a Venetian of comparable inclination but lesser brilliance, on a decorative ensemble for the Schloss Bensberg, near Cologne. This is one of three major paintings by Pellegrini in the Collection.
Exhibitions
Justice Fulminating the Vices
Giovanni Antonio Pellegrini
1717
Venus and Cupid
Giovanni Antonio Pellegrini
1700
The Infant Bacchus
Giuseppe Antonio Pianca
1752–1757
The Death of Rachel
Antonio Carneo
1660
A Vision of the Virgin
Giuseppe Antonio Petrini
circa 1750
The Annunciation
Domenico Antonio Vaccaro
early 1730s
Adoration of the Shepherds
Antonio Balestra
1690
A Mother Chastising a Child
Antonio Amorosi
1682
Saint Zeno Healing a Possessed Woman
Antonio Balestra
circa 1703-1704
The Storyteller
Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo
mid 1770s