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| "El Dolce Farniente" by Franz Winterhalter |
Instinct must have told Winterhalter that his sympathies lay overwhelmingly with French painting, and that the prospects of patronage for a court painter were much greater in this cosmopolitan centre than in any of the German capitals. Paris would be his testing ground.
Within months of arrival, Winterhalter had sent his first contribution to the Salon, a portrait of an unidentified woman. During 1835, he was devoting his energies to a more substantial contribution. 'Il Dolce Farniente,' a dreamy siesta scene set in Naples and staffed by an unusually large cast of handsome girls and young men, was a full-scale academic composition, dressed up as a genre scene. The harmonious disposition of the figures on two levels, the studied poses, and the mood of dreamy reverie, were inspired by Raphael's 'Parnassus.' Winterhalter was creating a Golden Age in modern dress, with exotic Italian props, and here lay the secret of its success. When the Salon of 1836 opened, 'Il Dolce Farniente' scored an immediate success; it was widely noticed in the press and it established its author as an up-and-coming man.
At the 1837 Salon, he followed up his earlier success with 'The Decameron,' a picture of Boccaccio's circle of storytellers. The recipe was the same as before, a tightly controlled academic composition in the style of Raphael, this time in a picturesque historical setting. Once again he scored a success. It was decorative and colourful, and formed a welcome contrast to the violent productions of the Romantic School. The picture was sold for 10,000 francs to a wealthy wool merchant and philanthropist, the Deputé Paturle, a fact sufficiently well publicized to reach the ears of Baron Eichtal, who relayed it at once to Menzenschwand."
To be continued
(Excerpts from the introduction by Richard Ormund, to "Franz Xaver Winterhalter and the Courts of Europe 1830-70.")






