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Giovanna Fratellini | Baroque painter

Giovanna Fratellini (1666-1731) was a Florentine artist during the Baroque period.
Born in Florence as Giovanna Marrmocchini Cortesi, she married Guiliano Fratellini in 1685 and changed her name to Fratellini.
This well-born woman pastellist was a lady-in-waiting to Vittoria della Rovere, the Grand Duchess of Tuscany.


Training

Fratellini was trained in painting and music under the ducal auspices, before which she trained with Livio Mehus and Pietro Dandini.
Her works consist of oil, pastel, miniature enamel and chalk.
She is primarily renowned for her portrait works but she also painted fables, bacchanals and historical subjects, such as the Death of Lucretia (untraced).

After training in the art of miniature painting with the Capuchin monk-painter Ippolito Galantini (1627-1706) and pastels with the noted Domenico Tempesti (c.1655-1737), she polished her skills with Anton Domenico Gabbiani.
Fratellini was accepted into Florence's Accademia del disegno in 1706 and elevated to full member in 1710.


Portraiture and commissions

Fratellini's portrait works were the means to her success and her sitters were considered the epitome of eightieth-century refinement.
Her works depicted a model of both noble and virtuous eightieth-century refinement.
Fratellini's depiction of Ceilia Pazzi (1720), part of her ‘child lady’ series, honors the young girls of noble birth in adult poses and adult features and characteristics.

In addition to portraits, Fratellini is documented as a religious painter for Cosimo III.
Prince Ferndinando commissioned several history and mythological pieces in pastel.
Her commissioned works were invoiced and recorded as having received up to 15 scudi for each completed portrait in pastel on paper.
Violante Beatrix Von Bayern, governor of Siena and wife of Tuscany's hereditary prince Ferninando de’ Medici commissioned her to portray many of the ladies at the court.


Fratellini accepted the task to commemorate the prominent circle of courtly ladies.
Violante Beatrix sent Fratellini to Bologna to portray Maria Klementyna Sobieska, the wife of the exiled James Francis Edward Stuart.
James Stuart later requested portraits of his sons.

Following her stay in Bologna she traveled to Venice to portray Violanta Beatrix's sister-in-law, Teresa Kunigunda Sobieska (1676-1730) and Maria Klementyna's aunt.
Fratellini is frequently compared to the Venetian painter Rosalba Carriera (1675-1757).
During her stay in Venice, she met Rosalba Carriera.


Fratellini is noted as having great admiration for Carriera, who also extended her “gentillissime accoglienze”, or kind hospitality.
Villa Petraia, a Medici villa that became the residence to the King of Italy during Florence's brief time as the Italian capital city during 1870 is located outside of Florence and is the home to some of Fratellini's best known works in pastel.
Also many of her works are pending restoration or maintenance and can be found in the Uffizi’s deposits.
A large number of her pastels that were commissioned by the Medici family are located there in the Uffizi’s portrait collection.


Teacher and mentor

The Tuscan artists welcomed her.
Throughout Fratellini’s lifetime she shared her artistic expertise with several female painters, most notably, Maria Maddalena Gozzi Baldacci and Violante Beatrice Siries Cerroti, a Florentine painter who was named after the patroness and princess.
Violante Beatrice Siries took Fratellini’s place as court painter after her death.


Self-Portrait

Fratellini’s self-portrait, depicting herself in the act of painting, “Self Portrait”, 1720 is in the Uffizi Gallery.
It is displayed in the Vasari Corridor.
Although she is shown holding oil paints and working on a miniature portrait painting, the work is completed in pastel.
She portrays herself as an attractive and lively middle-aged woman.

She is seen with energy and charm.
Fratellini's signature elements fluttering ribbons are spryly worn.
In the painting she can be seen working on a portrait of her son Lorenzo Fratellini.
Tragically, Lorenzo died two years before Fratellini.
Along with her son, Lorenzo, Fratellini taught Violante Beatrice Siries.


On television

The Emmy-winning PBS television documentary (June, 2013) Invisible Women, Forgotten Artists of Florence, based on Dr. Jane Fortune's book by the same title, features a segment on Giovanna Fratellini as an example of women artists teaching other women in Baroque Florence.
The television special, which spotlights the thousands of works by women in storage in Florence's museums including many of Fratellini's pastels and portraiture, reveals the 'creative ties and artistic succession between artists Giovanna Fratellini, Violante Siries Cerroti and Anna Bacherini Piattoli'. | Source: © Wikipedia



Giovanna Fratellini nata Marmocchini Cortesi (Firenze, 27 ottobre 1666 - Firenze, 18 aprile 1731) è stata una pittrice italiana del periodo barocco.

I ritratti a pastello della Fratellini erano apprezzati soprattutto per la straordinaria raffinatezza, allo stesso tempo “nobile e virtuosa”.
Oggi molti sono conservati agli Uffizi di Firenze (alcuni esposti, molti altri nei magazzini, in attesa di restauro).


Una serie piuttosto ampia di ritratti è conservata nella villa medicea La Petraia, situata nella zona collinare di Castello, poco sopra Firenze.
I dipinti si trovano nella "sala da toeletta" e vi furono appesi quando la villa fu riarredata in epoca sabauda (1865).
Durante il breve periodo di Firenze capitale d'Italia la villa fu infatti residenza di Vittorio Emanuele II e di Rosa Vercellana, sua moglie morganatica.

La "sala da toeletta" fu allestita adiacente alla camera di Rosa (comunemente detta "camera della bella Rosina").
La Fratellini realizzò anche alcuni autoritratti, fra i quali il più conosciuto, dipinto nel 1720, è esposto nel "corridoio vasariano", nel tratto dedicato alle opere settecentesche sopra Ponte Vecchio.

Nonostante non ne sia rimasta alcuna testimonianza materiale, il biografo settecentesco Federico Moucke ricorda che, oltre ai ritratti, la pittrice dipinse anche alcuni soggetti sacri per il granduca Cosimo III de' Medici e che il principe Ferdinando le commissionò varie opere storiche e mitologiche a pastello, per le quali (da registrazioni esistenti) la Fratellini fu pagata fino a 15 scudi per ogni dipinto a pastello completato.


Riscoperta nel XX secolo

Successivamente l'artista fiorentina è stata a lungo ignorata dagli storici dell'arte, ed è stata riconsiderata solo a partire dalla seconda metà del Novecento, quando tuttavia venne ritenuta inferiore rispetto alla più celebrata pastellista veneziana Rosalba Carriera.
Soltanto con gli studi di Mario Monteverdi (1981) e di Silvia Meloni Trkulja (1989) sulla pittura del Settecento si è avuta una rivalutazione della sua opera.

Attualmente continua a non godere di grande considerazione da parte degli storici dell'arte italiani, ma è stata trattata e rivalutata nelle opere di alcuni studiosi stranieri.

Lo storico dell’arte inglese Neil Jeffares ha inserito nel suo "Dictionary of pastellists before 1800" (Dizionario dei pastellisti antecedenti il 1800), del 2006, un'ampia biografia dell'artista, arricchita da illustrazioni.


La giornalista ed appassionata d'arte americana Jane Fortune nel 2009 ha pubblicato il saggio Invisible Women: Forgotten Artists of Florence ("Donne invisibili: artiste di Firenze dimenticate"), sul quale si è basata nel 2012 la WFYI Productions di Indianapolis per il documentario televisivo omonimo.
Il documentario mette in luce le migliaia di opere di artiste donne in deposito nei musei di Firenze, tra cui gran parte dei pastelli realizzati da Giovanna Fratellini e rivela i legami creativi e di successione artistica tra lei e le artiste Violante Beatrice Siries ed Anna Piattoli Bacherini.
Soprattutto presenta la Fratellini come esempio di donna artista che insegnava ad altre donne nella Firenze barocca.
Il documentario è risultato vincitore di un premio Emmy Award 2013 come miglior documentario nella categoria "programmi storico/culturali". | Fonte: © Wikipedia