Vincenzo GEMITO

(Naples 1852 - Naples 1929)

A Seated Dog

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Black chalk and watercolour, extensively heightened with white and yellow gouache, over an underdrawing in black chalk, on board.
Signed and dated GEMITO. 1913 at the lower left.
580 x 405 mm. (22 7/8 x 16 in.)
This splendid large drawing is closely related to a monumental finished portrait drawing by Vincenzo Gemito; a Portrait of Laura Bertolini of 1913, today in the collection of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, in which the same dog appears in an identical pose. The Portrait of Laura Bertolini, together with its pendant drawing of the sitter’s brother, dated 1914 and also in the Philadelphia Museum of Art, was made for the Bertolini family, who owned Bertolini’s Palace Hotel, one of the finest hotels in Naples in Gemito’s day. Given the sheer scale of Gemito’s two portrait drawings of the Bertolini children, each of which are nearly a metre and a half high, it has been suggested that they may have been intended to have been hung in one of the public rooms of the hotel.



A large drawing of what appears to be the same dog, executed in black chalk and pencil heightened with white, was on the art market in 2008.



The present sheet was one of a number of works by Vincenzo Gemito in the collection of the Marchese Filippo Eugenio Albani (1868-1940) and his wife Giulia, née Pignatari. The Marchese and Marchesa Albani lived in a splendid home on the Via Caracciolo in Naples, and were close friends of the artist, who drew a number of portraits of Giulia Albani.







After Antonio Canova, Vincenzo Gemito was perhaps the foremost Italian sculptor of the 19th century. (Indeed, he was described as such by the 20th century sculptor Giacomo Manzù.) A precocious talent, he received his early training as a young boy in the studios of the sculptors Emmanuele Caggiano and Stanislao Lista. In 1868 the sixteen-year old Gemito exhibited a sculpture at the Promotrice di Belle Arti in Naples that attracted the attention of the King of Italy, Vittorio Emmanuele II, who acquired a bronze cast of the work for the palace at Capodimonte. It was also at this time that the young sculptor gained the support of the leading Neapolitan painter Domenico Morelli. Between 1877 and 1880 Gemito lived in Paris, where he became a close friend of the French painter and sculptor Ernest Meissonier. At the Salon of 1877 he exhibited his sculpture of a Neapolitan Fisherboy to considerable critical acclaim, earning a number of portrait commissions as a result.



Gemito continued to participate in the Paris Salons after his return to Naples, winning the Grand Prix for sculpture in 1889 and a gold medal at the Exposition Universelle the following year. He also took part in the inaugural (and only) exhibition of the Société Internationale de Peintres et Sculpteurs at the Galerie Georges Petit in 1882, alongside John Singer Sargent, Giovanni Boldini, Jean Béraud and others. In 1883, with the financial support of the Belgian industrialist Baron Oscar de Mesnil, Gemito was able to set up his own foundry, located on the via Mergellina in Naples, although it was to cease production three years later. Around 1887, after he began to experience bouts of mental illness, Gemito gave up sculpture almost entirely, and spent much of next eighteen years as a recluse in his own home. He nevertheless continued to produce a large number of drawings, mostly portraits of friends and colleagues, as well as studies of street urchins, Neapolitan girls and other city folk. It was not until around 1909 that Gemito again took up sculpture full time, and it was in this later period of his career that he produced some of his finest work in bronze, executed with a delicacy and fineness of detail ultimately derived from his drawings.



Gemito was an immensely gifted draughtsman, and produced a large number of figure and portrait studies in pen, chalk, pastel and watercolour. His drawings were greatly admired throughout his career, and were avidly collected by his contemporaries. (Already in his lifetime, his drawings had been likened to those of the sculptors Auguste Rodin and Constantin Meunier by one Italian scholar, in an article published in 1916.) Yet until relatively recently Gemito’s drawings have remained little known outside Italy, and it may be argued that he deserves to be recognized as not only one of the most significant sculptors of the period, but also one of its most gifted and distinctive draughtsmen.

Provenance

The Marchesa Giulia Albani, Naples Thence by descent to a private collection, Italy.

Vincenzo GEMITO

A Seated Dog