Oil on Canvas Venetian School Italy XVIII Century - Jacob Receives Joseph's Bloody Tunic
Features
Jacob Receives Joseph's Bloody Tunic
Work title: Giacobbe riceve la tunica insanguinata di Giuseppe
Artistic school: Venetian School
Time: 18th Century / 1701 - 1800
Subject: Biblical scene
Artistic technique: Painting
Technical specification: Oil on Canvas
Description : Giacobbe riceve la tunica insanguinata di Giuseppe
Oil painting on canvas. Venetian school of the eighteenth century. The painting depicts the biblical episode taken from the book of Genesis, in which Joseph\'s brothers, jealous of their father Jacob\'s predilection for him, sell him a slave to merchants who go to Egypt and declare to their father that he is dead: they wear on trial the tunic soiled with the blood of an animal, that special tunic that Jacob had made specially weave for his beloved son. In this representation, in which the vivid colors underline the drama, the intense movement of the old patriarch stands out, who, disfigured in pain in the face, tries to keep that stained fabric away from himself, moving his whole body to the left and extending his arm. not to allow her to approach him, almost an attempt to deny the evidence. On the right, the group of three brothers, close together in an accomplice attitude, who tell and point to each other the paternal drama. Restored and relined, the painting is presented in a re-adapted antique frame.
Product Condition:
Product in good condition, with small signs of wear.
frame Size (cm):
Height: 106
Width: 110
Depth: 6
work dimensions (cm):
Height: 89
Width: 93
Additional Information
Artistic school: Venetian School
Time: 18th Century / 1701 - 1800
In the century of the Enlightenment, or the exaltation of reason and science as the only tools that can free man from ignorance and the yoke of the Church and the nobility, art passes from the intent of the Baroque to tell religious truths or to imitate nature, with strong chiaroscuro contrasts and artificial excesses, to the lighter and more vaporous forms (sometimes even frivolous and affected) of the so-called Barocchetto or Rococò, to lead to Neoclassicism which, looking at the ancient art of the Greeks and Romans, wants to re-propose the discovery of beauty, in the search for harmony, proportions, balances.Find out more about the 18th century with our insights:
Discovering the Barocchetto
FineArt: Giovanni Domenico Lombardi, Conversion of a centurion, 18th century