Giuseppe Maria Crespi, 'Musicians', about 1710-15
Two Peasant Scenes
Peasants with Donkeys and its companion painting Musicians are intimate scenes of peasant life, observed by night as if we ourselves are part of the action. Both make use of a warm, earthy palette and lively, loose brushwork to bring the figures they depict to life. The two pictures probably date from between 1710 and 1715, shortly after Crespi’s stay in Florence.
These pictures were formerly thought to be fragments of a single composition, perhaps an Old Testament subject. Close examination of the canvases, however, has shown that they were part of two separate, though related, works. Both have at some point been cut down at the left and top edges, and it is impossible to know how large they originally were. They are slightly different sizes but the similarities in the scale of the figures, the range of colour and the lively brushstrokes suggest that they must have been intended to hang together.
Peasants with Donkeys and its companion painting Musicians are intimate scenes of peasant life, observed by night as if we ourselves are part of the action. They probably date from between 1710 and 1715, shortly after Crespi’s stay in Florence.
These two pictures were formerly thought to be fragments of a single composition, perhaps an Old Testament subject. Close examination of the canvases, however, has shown that they were part of two separate, though related, works. Both have at some point been cut down at the left and top edges, and it is impossible to know how large they originally were. They are slightly different sizes but the similarities in the scale of the figures, the range of colour and the lively brushstrokes suggest that they must have been intended as pendants.
Although Crespi spent most of his career in Bologna, he played a significant role in shaping a taste for painting scenes of everyday life among his Italian contemporaries. Unlike the Netherlands, which had a thriving market for genre scenes, such paintings were relatively few and far between in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Italy. Crespi’s pupils Giambattista Piazzetta and Pietro Longhi played a significant role in developing the taste for this kind of genre scene, as did patrons like the Grand Prince Ferdinand de' Medici and Cardinal Pietro Ottoboni, for whom Crespi worked while in Florence.
Several figures in these two works were copied by the minor Bolognese painter Giuseppe Gambarini, who is not known as a pupil of Crespi but must have visited his studio in the 1710s. Gambarini’s Dance in the Country includes two musicians that are closely related to Crespi’s; its pendant, Friars Receiving Alms (both Staatsgalerie, Stuttgart) reverses the motif of the donkey and tradesman in Peasants with Donkeys, transforming the figure into a friar. Gambarini must have copied these aspects after Crespi’s pictures had been cropped: in the work of both artists only the forequarters of the donkey are visible.
Crespi’s two paintings were part of a group of 25 Italian Baroque pictures that entered the National Gallery’s collection in 2013. They previously belonged to Sir Denis Mahon, a distinguished collector, art historian and former trustee of the Gallery.