The Drunken SiIenus: Design for the "Tazza Farnese"

The Drunken SiIenus: Design for the "Tazza Farnese" by Annibale Carracci

Medium

Pen and brown ink, brush and brown wash, over traces of black chalk, and stylus compass constructions; framing lines in pen and brown ink and black chalk or charcoal

Dimensions

sheet: 10 1/16 x 10 1/16 in. (25.6 x 25.5 cm)

Classification

Drawings

Department

Drawings and Prints

Museum

Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY

Credit

Harris Brisbane Dick and Rogers Funds, 1972

Accession Number

1972.133.4

Tags

Male NudesSilenus

Art Historical Context

Annibale Carracci's *The Drunken Silenus Design for the "T Farnese"* (1599–1600) captures the exuberant spirit of classical mythology in a masterful preparatory drawing. Depicting the mythological figure Silenus—Dionysus's merry, inebriated companion—the work replicates the famous ancient Roman cameo known as the Tazza Farn, a treasure of the Farnese family collection. Carracci, a leading Bolognese artist and pioneer of the Baroque style, created this during his transformative work on the Farnese Gallery frescoes in Rome, blending Renaissance naturalism with classical antiquity to revitalize a...

About the Artist

Annibale Carracci · 15601609

Annibale was considered one of the greatest Italian painters of his age. His style is marked by naturalism combined with the formal language of Classicism in a grand and monumental style. Annibale was also instrumental in evolving the ideal, classical landscape and is generally credited with the invention of caricature. Italian painter. Comment on works: Mythology.

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