Sketch for a Ceiling with an Allegory of Fortitude and Wisdom
Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo, 1780–85
About this artwork
Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo the gifted son of the renowned Venetian Rococo master Giovanni Battista Tiepolo created this delicate *Sketch for a Ceiling with an Allegory of Fort and Wisdom* around 1780–85. Working in pen and brown ink with brown over black chalk on a modest sheet measuring just 10 1/16 x 7 7/16 inches, Tiepolo captured the dynamic energy of ceiling decorations popular in grand European palaces and villas. This preparatory drawing hints at the swirling figures andistic perspectives that defined Rococo frescoes, where like Fortitude (strength and Wisdom were personified to inspire moral elevation. As a late-career work from Tiepolo's time in Venice after his family's Spanish sojourn, it reflects the waning Rococo style amid rising Neoclassicism, blending exuberant ornamentation with symbolic depth. The layered technique—black chalk for underdrawing, ink for precise lines, and wash for atmospheric shading—allowed rapid exploration of compositions meant for expansive ceilings. Housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Robert Lehman Collection since 1975, this sketch offers a rare glimpse into the creative process behind opulent 18th-century interiors, reminding us how artists like Tiepolo turned abstract ideals into breathtaking visual poetry.