Sibila

ca. 1870
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 803
Esta obra é considerada uma das tentativas mais bem sucedidas de imitar o estilo alto renascentista de Rafael de Corot. A pose lembra especialmente a do retrato de Bindo Altoviti na Galeria Nacional de Arte, em Washington, que nos tempos de Corot era considerado como um autorretrato do próprio Rafael. Embora o quadro tenha sido inspirado no disegno rafaelesco, sua criação passou por diversas fases. Talvez no princípio Corot tenha concebido essa pintura como uma representação da musa Polimnia tocando um violoncelo, (o instrumento, oculto por camadas de pinturas posteriores, aparece se examinar a tela com raios X). A hera, que adorna o cabelo da figura, pode constituir uma referência à imortalidade da arte. A pintura ficou sem terminar e nunca foi assinada e exposta durante a vida de Corot.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Título: Sibila
  • Artista: Camille Corot, francês, 1796–1875
  • Data: ca. 1870
  • Meio: Óleo sobre tela
  • Dimensões: 81,9 x 64,8 cm
  • Linha de créditos: Coleção de H. O. Havemeyer, legado da Sra. de H. O. Havemeyer, 1929
  • Número de acesso: 29.100.565
  • Curatorial Department: European Paintings

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Cover Image for 6062. Sibylle

6062. Sibylle

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KEITH CHRISTIANSEN: Camille Corot is best known as a landscape painter, but in this painting of about 1870, he reveals his commitment to figure painting. Research Curator Asher Miller:

ASHER MILLER: This painting is unfinished. It's a painting in process. Corot originally depicted this woman playing a cello with attributes of music. Corot repeatedly adjusted the contour of the cello and the position of the bow before painting them out entirely, dropping the right hand into the model's lap and inserting a rose in her left hand. The ivy in her hair may symbolize the immortality of the arts.

KEITH CHRISTIANSEN: In Corot’s original conception, the figure would have personified Polyhymnia, the cello-playing muse of music. Over time, however, it became known simply as “The Italian Woman.” Corot’s model was Agostina, known as “the Italian of Montparnasse,” the Paris neighborhood where Corot had his studio.

ASHER MILLER: One of the most striking features of the painting in its present state is the rough, summary brushwork of the models' hands and arms, passages that Corot struggled with, and her clearly described head. He retained the swanlike arch of her back, neck and head, which indicates the artist's attempt to emulate the famously elegant draftsmanship of the Renaissance master Raphael.

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