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1 of 253523 objects
Two girls with a bird-cage and a youth with a gun c. 1730 - c. 1740
Black and white chalks on blue paper faded to brown | 41.2 x 55.7 cm (sheet of paper) | RCIN 991252
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A black and white chalk drawing on blue paper faded to brown, showing three figures. In the centre is a girl holding a bird in a cage who looks out at the viewer. To her left is another female figure who looks to the male figure on the left hand side. The man holds an gun and looks to the upper left.
Giovanni Battista Piazzetta produced a great number of these chalk drawings on blue paper of character heads, with one, two and sometimes three heads on the same sheet. His biographers (Albrizzi, Studij di pittura and Dezalier d'Argenville) noted that it was through the sale of these drawings that he was able to sustain his family, and he built up a strong reputation for them. The drawings were always intended to be framed and hung, the consequent exposure to daylight causing the paper to fade from blue to brown.
Although the models in some of these drawings have been identified (Piazzetta's wife, son and daughter appear several times), they are not intended as portraits of particular sitters. Instead they are often shown with accompanying attributes, in this case a small dog, or with particular facial expressions, operating in the tradition of têtes d'expression. Often the meaning of the attributes is not overt, but the drawings are enigmatic ruminations on age, beauty, innocence and other timeless themes. Here the caged bird symbolises the girl’s virginity and the youth with the gun is hunting, a common metaphor for amorous pursuit.
All thirty-six of the Piazzetta heads in the Royal Collection, which were hanging at Buckingham Palace until the early twentieth century, must have been acquired as part of the collection of Consul Joseph Smith in 1762. Many of the Piazzetta heads in Smith's collection were engraved by Cattini in 1754 as the Icones ad vivum expressae. The drawings were also copied assiduously by George III's daughters.Provenance
Probably from the collection of Consul Joseph Smith and bought by George III in 1762
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Medium and techniques
Black and white chalks on blue paper faded to brown
Measurements
41.2 x 55.7 cm (sheet of paper)