Allegoria del Tempo che indica la Verità
Giacomo Stella (Brescia 1545 - Roma 1630)
Giacomo Stella
(Brescia 1545 - Rome 1630)
(Brescia 1545 - Rome 1630)
Allegory of Time Indicating Truth
Oil painting on canvas
192 x 74cm.
In golden frame 198 x 81 cm.
The work is accompanied by a critical study written by prof. Emilio Negro (Bologna)
The beautiful allegorical composition in question, which portrays a proud female figure, was originally conceived to be part of the representative furnishings of a large noble palace, and represents the personification of Time which indicates the Truth (a second interpretation, although less fitting, could be the cardinal virtue of Temperance).
This allegorical typology, with a marked Renaissance flavor due to its implied meanings of great political as well as moral value, had great success throughout the 16th and 17th centuries, inducing the spectator to lead, on the basis of past events, a life dedicated to the discipline, to the truth indeed.
The allegory is personified by a girl with an iridescent red dress, with her index finger raised as a warning sign; in her hands she holds the book of History, whose temporal consequentiality allows us to have the tools to attain wisdom, while at her feet we can see an hourglass, the quintessential symbol of the passing of time.
The work, whose execution expresses elegance and power at the same time, can be traced back to Giacomo Stella (Brescia 1545 - Rome 1630), a significant Mannerist artist active between the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, originally from Brescia but especially active in Rome, where moved at a young age, under the pontificates of Gregory XIII (1572-1585) and his successors Sixtus V (1585-1590) and Urban VIII.
In the papal city he came into contact with Girolamo Muziano and Cesare Nebbia, active in many of the major projects of the late 16th century commissioned by the papacy. Among these the most important is the fresco of one of the major religious works of the time, the construction and decoration of the Sistine Chapel in the Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore (not to be confused with that of the Vatican), destined to become a funeral chapel for Pope Sixtus V .
Painter of great temperament and gifted with a beautiful naturalist shot, the great frescoes of the 'Resurrection 'and of the 'Creation of Eve', at the Scala Santa in Rome, are certainly due to his only hand.
Conservation status:
On the painting are visible old restorations related to the era of the canvas and color retouching.
The painting is sold together with a pleasant gilded wooden frame.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
The work is sold with a certificate of authenticity and a descriptive iconographic sheet.
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