The Dying Cleopatra
The Dying Cleopatra or The Death of Cleopatra is a c. 1648 oil on canvas painting by Guercino, now in the Palazzo Rosso in Genoa.[1]
History
The painter is recorded as receiving 125 ducatoni (equivalent to 156 scudi) on 24 March 1648 from Monsignor Carlo Emanuele Durazzo of Genoa for a work on this subject.[1] Initially owned by the abbots' two nephews, about a century later it was owned byt the Brignole family, in whose residence it was recorded in 1756–66. It remained with them until 1889 when the last surviving member of the house Maria Brignole Sale, duchess of Galliera, left it to the city, which displayed it in palazzo Bianco, then its current home.[1][2] Guercino produced another lower-quality work on the same subject around 1650, since on 8 March that year its commissioner Girolamo Panesi, a Genoese resident of Rome, paid him 110 ducatoni (equivalent to 132 scudi).[1]
References
- ^ a b c d (in Italian) P. Bagni, D. De Grazia, D. Mahon, F. Gozzi and A. Emiliani, Giovanni Francesco Barbieri Il Guercino 1591-1666, a cura di Denis Mahon, Bologna, Nuova Alfa Editoriale, 1991, ISBN 9788877792846, p. 310.
- ^ (in Italian) P. Boccardo, La Galleria di Palazzo Rosso Genova, Milano, Federico Garolla Editore, 1992, pp. 49-51.
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- The Death of Dido (1631)
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- Saint Jerome (c. 1640–1650)
- The Suicide of Cato (1641)
- Hersilia Separating Romulus and Tatius (1645)
- Annunciation (1646)
- Circumcision of Christ (1646)
- Christ Crowned with Thorns (1647)
- The Persian Sibyl (1647)
- The Dying Cleopatra (c. 1648)
- Susannah and the Elders (1650)
- The Libyan Sibyl (1651)
- The Martyrdom of Saint Catherine (1653)
- Samson and Delilah (1654)
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