Lot

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"Nella stalla" - Salvatore Mazza

In AUCTION 38 - 27 May 2023 at 3 pm - 19th and 20...

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Brescia

(Milano 1819 - 1886)
Cm 45x55 | In 17.72x21.65
Oil on canvas

The son of Carlo, an accountant employed by Marquis Giuseppe Arconati Visconti in 1840, he graduated in law from the University of Pavia. He soon abandoned the idea of a career as a lawyer and in 1842 he presented a series of genre paintings at the Brera exhibition. Following in the footsteps of Domenico Induno, Salvatore Mazza later chose to focus on realistic painting, as opposed to the dominant Romantic current that preferred courtly and historical painting. In 1844 he presented at Brera two canvases with episodes from the Greek War of Independence and genre paintings of popular settings. He undertook long study trips to the Papal States and the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, taking new insights from life in the cities and villages and filling his albums with sketches of landscapes and figures. Back in Milan he painted Funerale nella Campagna romana, Briganti calabresi, La maliarda (1845) and Predica al santuario nelle vicinanze di Sora (1847). With his father Carlo and older brother Giuseppe he distinguished himself in March 1848 during the defense of Milan from Austrian troops. Many years later he collected his memories in the autobiographical book The Five Days of Milan (1885), in which he described his experience among Carlo Cattaneo's supporters. On the same theme he painted in 1850: Scene of the Five Days in Via Santa Radegonda, Scene of the Five Days at Porta Tosa, Milanese Nocturne and Milan March 18, 1848 the beginning of the Five Days Revolution. With his brother Giuseppe he militated in the ranks of the Piedmontese army during the Campaign of 1859. A versatile artist, he devoted himself to writing historical novels, such as Il memoriale di frà Luca d'Avellino-set in 18th-century Naples and embellished with some 800 of his illustrations, including genre scenes and landscapes, done with a quick and sure touch-and Fantasie artistiche e letterarie. Between 1850 and 1854 he presented 28 paintings at Brera, including I bravi alla Malanotte, a subject from The Betrothed. Two of his mountain landscapes-A Hurricane on the Apennines and The Fall of the Sun-were published. In 1856, he was awarded the Mylius Prize with the painting A Herd at Rest. He also made medium or small canvases, with landscapes and with animals, to please the tastes of the Milanese bourgeoisie. He often painted en plein air, as he recounted in Gite d'artista e studii dal vero: descrizioni e racconti. He worked particularly on the pre-Alpine and Apennine hills, following the method favored by other Lombard landscape painters, such as Giovanni Battista Lelli and Gaetano Fasanotti (1831-1882). As a draftsman, caricaturist, and cartoonist, he collaborated on satirical newspapers, including Lo Spirito Folletto and Leone Fortis's two Milanese magazines Il Pungolo and Panorama, in which Cletto Arrighi, Ippolito Nievo, Venetian playwrights Paulo Fambri and Vittorio Salmini, and Giuseppe Rovani wrote. As an illustrator he collaborated on Franco Mistrali's I misteri del Vaticano o La Roma dei papi (1861-62), published in four volumes? a curious and anticlerical reinterpretation of Church history. His painting La stalla di un albergo was awarded a prize at the 1861 National Exhibition in Florence, while his canvases Il pensieroso, Il maniscalco, and Stalla rustica were presented at the 1867 Universal Exhibition in Paris. He was elected a member of the council of the Brera Academy; he reviewed exhibitions in the Milanese newspapers Il Pungolo and La Lombardia, then in L'Illustrazione Italiana. He was an honorary member of the art academies of Mantua and Urbino. A portrait of him as a young man, painted by his brother Giuseppe, is in Milan at the National Center for Manzonian Studies, Casa Manzoni. He died in Milan on October 24, 1886. An early portrait of him, autographed by his brother Giuseppe, is in Milan, Centro nazionale di studi manzoniani. The Milanese Mazza family gave three artists: Salvatore Mazza - who as a cartoonist signed himself Salvatore - his brother Giuseppe (Milan, 1817 - Milan, 1884), a painter of historical and genre subjects, and Aldo (Milan, 1880-Gavirate, 1964) - Giuseppe's son - who was a painter, publicist, cartoonist and caricaturist.

(Milano 1819 - 1886)
Cm 45x55 | In 17.72x21.65
Oil on canvas

The son of Carlo, an accountant employed by Marquis Giuseppe Arconati Visconti in 1840, he graduated in law from the University of Pavia. He soon abandoned the idea of a career as a lawyer and in 1842 he presented a series of genre paintings at the Brera exhibition. Following in the footsteps of Domenico Induno, Salvatore Mazza later chose to focus on realistic painting, as opposed to the dominant Romantic current that preferred courtly and historical painting. In 1844 he presented at Brera two canvases with episodes from the Greek War of Independence and genre paintings of popular settings. He undertook long study trips to the Papal States and the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, taking new insights from life in the cities and villages and filling his albums with sketches of landscapes and figures. Back in Milan he painted Funerale nella Campagna romana, Briganti calabresi, La maliarda (1845) and Predica al santuario nelle vicinanze di Sora (1847). With his father Carlo and older brother Giuseppe he distinguished himself in March 1848 during the defense of Milan from Austrian troops. Many years later he collected his memories in the autobiographical book The Five Days of Milan (1885), in which he described his experience among Carlo Cattaneo's supporters. On the same theme he painted in 1850: Scene of the Five Days in Via Santa Radegonda, Scene of the Five Days at Porta Tosa, Milanese Nocturne and Milan March 18, 1848 the beginning of the Five Days Revolution. With his brother Giuseppe he militated in the ranks of the Piedmontese army during the Campaign of 1859. A versatile artist, he devoted himself to writing historical novels, such as Il memoriale di frà Luca d'Avellino-set in 18th-century Naples and embellished with some 800 of his illustrations, including genre scenes and landscapes, done with a quick and sure touch-and Fantasie artistiche e letterarie. Between 1850 and 1854 he presented 28 paintings at Brera, including I bravi alla Malanotte, a subject from The Betrothed. Two of his mountain landscapes-A Hurricane on the Apennines and The Fall of the Sun-were published. In 1856, he was awarded the Mylius Prize with the painting A Herd at Rest. He also made medium or small canvases, with landscapes and with animals, to please the tastes of the Milanese bourgeoisie. He often painted en plein air, as he recounted in Gite d'artista e studii dal vero: descrizioni e racconti. He worked particularly on the pre-Alpine and Apennine hills, following the method favored by other Lombard landscape painters, such as Giovanni Battista Lelli and Gaetano Fasanotti (1831-1882). As a draftsman, caricaturist, and cartoonist, he collaborated on satirical newspapers, including Lo Spirito Folletto and Leone Fortis's two Milanese magazines Il Pungolo and Panorama, in which Cletto Arrighi, Ippolito Nievo, Venetian playwrights Paulo Fambri and Vittorio Salmini, and Giuseppe Rovani wrote. As an illustrator he collaborated on Franco Mistrali's I misteri del Vaticano o La Roma dei papi (1861-62), published in four volumes? a curious and anticlerical reinterpretation of Church history. His painting La stalla di un albergo was awarded a prize at the 1861 National Exhibition in Florence, while his canvases Il pensieroso, Il maniscalco, and Stalla rustica were presented at the 1867 Universal Exhibition in Paris. He was elected a member of the council of the Brera Academy; he reviewed exhibitions in the Milanese newspapers Il Pungolo and La Lombardia, then in L'Illustrazione Italiana. He was an honorary member of the art academies of Mantua and Urbino. A portrait of him as a young man, painted by his brother Giuseppe, is in Milan at the National Center for Manzonian Studies, Casa Manzoni. He died in Milan on October 24, 1886. An early portrait of him, autographed by his brother Giuseppe, is in Milan, Centro nazionale di studi manzoniani. The Milanese Mazza family gave three artists: Salvatore Mazza - who as a cartoonist signed himself Salvatore - his brother Giuseppe (Milan, 1817 - Milan, 1884), a painter of historical and genre subjects, and Aldo (Milan, 1880-Gavirate, 1964) - Giuseppe's son - who was a painter, publicist, cartoonist and caricaturist.

AUCTION 38 - 27 May 2023 at 3 pm - 19th and 20th century paintings

Sale Date(s)
Lots: 50
Venue Address
Via F. Cairoli
Brescia
25122
Italy

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