by ANNY SHAW
New research reveals
underdrawing that dates the painting to a decade earlier than previously
thought
David Bowie's Tintoretto
being unveiled (Image: @ Ans Brys)
For 30 years, David Bowie
cherished his altarpiece by Jacopo Tintoretto, even naming his record label
after the Venetian painter. But little did Bowie know that beneath the layers
of oil was an underdrawing that suggests the work was created earlier than
previously thought.
The discovery by the Royal
Institute for Cultural Heritage in Brussels, whose technical analysis also
revealed the work was painted entirely by the Venetian artist and not by his
studio, has prompted plans to return the painting to Venice for the 2019
Biennale. The altarpiece is due to go on show with a group of works by Flemish
Old Masters who admired and were influenced by Tintoretto, including Rubens,
Van Dyck and Maerten de Vos.
The painting was bought by
an unnamed European collector for £155,000 (£191,000 with fees) at Sotheby’s
white-glove sale of Bowie’s collection last November. It was immediately
announced that the work, now dated 1560–70, would be loaned long-term to the
Rubens House in Antwerp, a museum that Bowie loved. The painting is being
unveiled there this week (27 June).
The late musician bought
the canvas from the London dealer Colnaghi in 1987 and it is the Colnaghi
Foundation that is now co-ordinating the research project. Further analysis
later this year will examine the sky and architectural details in the
composition. A full scholarly publication on the altarpiece will be published
in October.
Tintoretto painted the
work, depicting an angel warning Saint Catherine of Alexandria of her impending
martyrdom, for the church of San Geminiano on St Mark’s Square in Venice, where
it remained until the church was demolished in 1807. The painting was briefly
placed in the Galleria dell’Accademia, Florence, before disappearing into
private ownership. The work most likely left Venice in around 1818 when it was
acquired by a Colonel T.H. Davies.
The 2019 Venice exhibition
will focus on the demolished Church of San Geminiano and the works of art it
once housed. Rubens most likely saw Tintoretto’s altarpiece there, while
Anthony van Dyck, his celebrated pupil, sketched it in situ.
Ben Weyts, Belgium’s
minister for tourism, describes the exhibition as a “unique opportunity to show
the Flemish masters to the world in the place where—more than any other—they
drew inspiration from their Italian colleagues and from the classical legacy”.
http://theartnewspaper.com/market/david-bowie-s-tintoretto-altarpiece-to-return-to-venice-for-2019-biennale/
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