Guercino - Mind to Paper at Courtauld Institute of Art
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Guercino - Mind to Paper at Courtauld Institute of Art
Guercino, Two seated women drying their hair in front of a fire, c. 1635, pen and ink on paper, 26.6 cm x 18.9 cm. © Courtauld Institute of Art Gallery, London.



LONDON, ENGLAND.- The Courtauld Institute of Art presents Guercino – Mind to Paper, on view through May 13, 2007. Giovanni Francesco Barbieri (1591-1666), nicknamed Guercino (“squinter”) after a childhood incident left him cross-eyed, is regarded as one of the most significant Italian artists of the Baroque period. A prolific and fluent draughtsman who was known as ‘the Rembrandt of the South’, he was hailed for his inventive approach to subject matter, his deftness of touch and his ability to capture drama and movement. This exhibition reflects the artist’s extraordinary technical and stylistic versatility, and is the second joint exhibition to be organised as part of the Courtauld Institute of Art’s ongoing collaboration with the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles.

Guercino spent almost his whole life close to his birthplace of Cento near Ferrara, and in Bologna, but his reputation was cemented in Rome while he was working for the court of Pope Gregory XV between 1621 and 1623. After returning to northern Italy, he ran a busy and successful workshop where he made hundreds of paintings over the course of his career. His works were sought after internationally but he turned down invitations to become a court artist in both London and Paris.Guercino is celebrated as one of the most naturally gifted and versatile draughtsmen of his age. The drawings in the exhibition have been specifically chosen to demonstrate his remarkable technical and compositional ability as well as his wide-ranging choice of subject matter. They include a rare large study of a male nude, an imaginary landscape, a caricature, a number of highly appealing informal scenes from everyday life and exploratory studies for large painted compositions. Guercino’s early biographer Carlo Cesare Malvasia (1616-93) recorded that the artist was ‘affectionate of the poor, who flocked around him whenever he left his house, as if he were their father; he enjoyed conversing with them’. His sympathy for a variety of human situations is particularly apparent in such scenes as Interior of a baker’s shop, a scene humorously observed from life.

A prominent feature of Guercino’s drawing technique is his varied use of drawing media and techniques. Goose feather pen dipped enabled him to record his fleeting ideas on paper quickly and easily, as is evident in Cupid restraining Mars, characterised by its remarkable sense of spontaneity and energy. He used other media when he felt them more suitable such as in A child seen from behind, in which rubbed red chalk subtly conveys the feel of a baby’s dimpled skin. In Two women drying their hair, loosely applied brown wash is used to describe the cascading wet tresses drying in front of the open fire.

Featuring rarely seen works from the Courtauld’s own collection, as well as loans from the J. Paul Getty Museum, the Los Angeles County Museum and two American private collections, this exhibition investigates and celebrates the enduring appeal of Guercino’s draughtsmanship. The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue by Dr Julian Brooks, Assistant Curator of Drawings at the J. Paul Getty Museum.










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