Galleria Borghese logo
Search results for
X
No results :(

Hints for your search:

  • Search engine results update instantly as soon as you change your search key.
  • If you have entered more than one word, try to simplify the search by writing only one, later you can add other words to filter the results.
  • Omit words with less than 3 characters, as well as common words like "the", "of", "from", as they will not be included in the search.
  • You don't need to enter accents or capitalization.
  • The search for words, even if partially written, will also include the different variants existing in the database.
  • If your search yields no results, try typing just the first few characters of a word to see if it exists in the database.

Diana’s Hunt

Attributed to Locatelli Pietro

(Rome, c. 1637 - Rome, 1710)

This small work on copper was first documented as forming part of the Borghese Collection in 1763. It was painted by Pietro Locatelli in the context of the decorative programme for the Casino del Graziano, a small structure at the edge of the park which Scipione Borghese purchased in 1616. It depicts Diana, goddess of the hunt, together with her nymphs, two of whom are shooting arrows. The scene develops on two planes, which are brought together in the centre by a group of girls, behind whom opens a vast landscape dominated by mountains, whose colours are here given emphasis by the work’s copper support medium.


Object details

Inventory
531
Location
Date
1650-1670
Classification
Period
Medium
oil on copper
Dimensions
8 x 11 cm
Frame

Late 18-/19th-century frame (part of a polyptych)

Provenance

Rome, Borghese Collection, 1763 (Inventory 1763, p. 160; Della Pergola 1959); Inventory 1765, p. 243; Inventory 1785, p. 16; Inventory 1790, room VII, nos 69, 70; Inventario Fidecommissario Borghese 1833, p. 28. Purchased by Italian state, 1902.


Commentary

Paola della Pergola (1959) identified this work on copper as one of the ‘six small works on panel depicting the deeds of Diana, by Pietro Locatelli, student of Pietro da Cortona’. This entry is found in the 1763 inventory of works held at the Casino del Graziano, a small structure that previously belonged to the jurist Stefano Graziani, who sold it to Scipione Borghese in 1616.

Together with The Judgement of Paris (inv. no. 529), the work appears in the 1785 inventory with the proper description. The 1790 inventory, however, attributed the work to Filippo Lauri, an error repeated in the 1833 Inventario Fidecommissario and again by Giovanni Piancastelli (1891) and in Adolfo Venturi’s catalogue (1893). It was only rejected in 1929, when Roberto Longhi argued that the two small works on copper were by ‘a mediocre painter of the late 18th century’, without proposing a name. Following the discovery of two inventories of the Casino del Graziano, Paola della Pergola (1959) made the proper attribution to Pietro Locatelli, a view accepted by all subsequent critics (see, most recently, Herrmann Fiore 2006).

We have little information about the painter of Roman origin. In all likelihood he trained in the workshop of Pietro da Cortona, with whom he worked on the great decorative programmes in Rome. During his apprenticeship, he made the acquaintance of Ciro Ferri, who became his friend and collaborator. As critics have pointed out (see Manieri Elia 1997), Locatelli painted the vault of the so-called Scarabattoli Room for the Borghese family, which the inventory of 1762 described in these words: ‘all painted on canvas [...] with chiaroscuro decorations, with a black-ground frame below with gilded arabesques, its corners likewise gilded, and each with an ostrich egg’. He executed this work together with several paintings, including the one in question, which forms part of a cycle depicting ‘various episodes of Diana’ (Inv. 1762, c. 160). This work is consistent with others of the painter’s oeuvre: forged in Cortona, his style seems to anticipate several typical approaches of 18th-century painting which ‘in fact simplify Pietro da Cortona’s pictorial dilemma’ (see Fagiolo dell'Arco 2001).

Antonio Iommelli




Bibliography
  • M. Vasi, Itinéraire, Paris 1792, p. 367. 
  • X. Barbier de Montault, Les Musées et Galeries de Rome, Rome 1870, p. 357. 
  • G. Piancastelli, Catalogo dei quadri della Galleria Borghese, in Archivio Galleria Borghese, 1891, p. 348. 
  • A. Venturi, Il Museo e la Galleria Borghese, Roma 1893, p. 223. 
  • R. Longhi, Precisioni nelle Gallerie Italiane, I, La R. Galleria Borghese, Roma 1928, p. 225. 
  • P. della Pergola, La Galleria Borghese. I Dipinti, II, Roma 1959, p. 98, n. 141. 
  • G. Manieri Elia, in Pietro da Cortona (1597-1669), catalogo della mostra (Roma, Palazzo Venezia, 1997-1998), a cura di A. Lo Bianco, Milano 1997, p. 269, n. 4.
  • M. Fagiolo dell’Arco, Pietro da Cortona e i ’cortoneschi’. Gimignani, Romanelli, Baldi, il Borgognone, Ferri, Milano 2001, p. 92.
  • L. Di Calisto, Locatelli, Pietro, in Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, LXV, 2005, ad vocem.
  • K. Herrmann Fiore, Galleria Borghese Roma scopre un tesoro. Dalla pinacoteca ai depositi un museo che non ha più segreti, San Giuliano Milanese 2006, p.171.