Two Children Teasing a Cat
Annibale Carracci
About this artwork
Annibale Carracci'sTwo Children Teasing a Cat* (c. 1587–88), an oil on canvas measuring 26 x 35 inches, captures a lively moment childhood mischief: two children—one boy and one girl—dangling a crayfish to torment a startled cat. This intimate genre scene, now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's European Paintings collection (acquired in 1994), marked a bold shift in art history. Carracci elevated everyday life to the prestige of traditional history painting, blending sharp psychological observation with subtle moral lessons drawn from proverbs about the consequences of reckless pranks. A leading force in the birth of Baroque art, Carracci—working alongside his brother Agostino and cousin Ludovico in Bologna—fused Venetian colorism, Roman grandeur, and Lombard naturalism. Fresh from a Venetian trip, he adopted Paolo Veronese's influence in the painting's direct brushwork and innovative wet-into-wet technique, infusing the canvas with emotional authenticity and technical brilliance. Though famed for grand frescoes like Rome's Farnese Gallery, Carracci pioneered dignified depictions of ordinary folk, from butchers to bean-eaters. This masterwork profoundly shaped genre painting, inspiring Dutch Golden Age artists and 17th-century French and Spanish realists. It reminds us how art can transform the mundane into profound commentary on human nature.