Orsola Maddalena Caccia
Orsola Maddalena Caccia | |
---|---|
Born |
Theodora Caccia [1] c. 1596 Moncalvo, Italy |
Died |
c. 1676 Moncalvo, Italy |
Nationality | Italian |
Education | Guglielmo Caccia (father) |
Known for | Painting |
Notable work | “Birth of the Virgin, Still Life with Flowers, Fruit, Mushroom, Goldfinch, and Hoopoe, "St. Luke the Evangelist in the Studio" |
Movement | Mannerism |
Orsola Maddalena Caccia, born Theodora Caccia (1596–1676) was an Italian mannerist painter and Christian nun. She painted religious images, altarpieces, and still lifes.
Biography
The daughter of painter Guglielmo Caccia and Laura Olivia, she was baptized Theodora Orsola on December 4, 1596.[2] In 1620, she entered the Ursuline convent of Bianzè, where she changed her name to Orsola Maddalena after she took her vows.[1] Four of her sisters had already taken their vows there. Two years later, her other sister joined this convent, reuniting the six sisters together.[3] At the time, Bianzé was a fortified outpost on the frontier between the lands of the Gonzaga, the dukes of Mantua and Monferrato, and the duchy of Savoy and was often in the path of these warring armies.[3] To find a safer home for his daughters, Guglielmo requested and received permission to found the Ursuline convent at Moncalvo from the Bishop of Casale Monferrato, Monsignor Scipione Agnelli. He used his own money and made the houses he owned available to pay for this project.[3] In 1625, Orsola and her sisters moved to the newly founded convent. Her father died a few months after the convent was established and left drawings, set squares, and other art tools for his daughters.[4] Before his death, he had fostered painting as a vocation for the Ursulines of Moncalvo.[3] Out of his six daughters and two sons, Orsola and her sister Francesca, who died at a young age, were his only two children to become painters.[1] She was known as the leader of women in art when it comes to religious painting. Without her, nuns would not have been able to explore their artistic yet religious side.[5] Later in her life, Orsola became the abbess of the convent.[2] She outlived all of her sisters and devoted herself to painting until her death in 1676.[4]
Career
Sister Orsola began her career working as her father's assistant. She learned to paint by mixing the colored pigments for paint and depicting the secondary figures in her father's paintings. She was a prolific artist and the majority of her works are scattered across the many small localities in Monferrat. It is claimed that she painted the first recorded flower painting in Italy.[1]
She went on to organize a painting studio within the convent at Moncalvo, where took on students and assistants of her own.[1] Painting as a trade was encouraged at the convent as it provided a means of support. Several of Sister Orsola pieces were painted on commission. Not only did she commission her works, which she did privately and publicly but she paved the way for nuns to become artists.[5] In two letters addressed to Christine of France written in 1643, she asked to be given an opportunity for paid work as her convent was suffering from poverty.[2]
She helped bring still life painting to Northwestern Italy. The idea of extremely detailed religious art was also because of Orsola. She brought people to realize that scenes of the Bible were very important to the story. She also started to use symbolism in her paintings, such as roses meaning virgin and Ox meaning Jesus’s death.[5]
Works
Sister Orsola created religious genre paintings, altarpieces, and still lifes which varied little over the course of the fifty years she painted.[4] Most of her works convey the repertoire of figurative models and types of composition that she studied in her father's studio during her adolescence.[6] In comparison to her many altarpieces and religious paintings, Sister Orsola created few still life works.[6] She commonly inserted pieces of still life in many of her religious works.[4] These elements of still life are a reflection of the types of objects she had access to in the convent and could study from.[1] Many of her still lifes are considered unusual and notable in their invention and stylistic quality.[4] Each element of her still lifes is meticulously placed and balanced by other figures in the composition.[1] She also depicted various species of flowers and other plants in her works.[4] Orsola's paintings are recognizable as her creations since they are filled with spirituality and are lifelike in their precision.[4] As the years go on, more of her works continue to be discovered and are correctly attributed to her after initial mislabeling.[4]
Major works
Sister Orsola's Birth of the Virgin was most likely created around 1635. The original provenance of this image is unknown, making it hard to establish exact year it was created. Originally, it was attributed to her father, then reassigned to the family workshop, and finally identified as one of Orsola's works. In 1838, it entered the Pinacoteca do Estado de São Paulo at the request from Marchese Luigi Malaspina. It is often regarded as one of her best known works. It depicts the sacred tale of the Virgin Mary's birth with a wealth of details. Three women look after Mary's mother Anne who is lying on her bed after labor while three others prepare to wash the newborn child and heat pieces of cloth at a fire. Various still life elements are inserted into this scene which are notable for their precision and quality. For example, a table on the left side of the image has an elaborate, coiled amphora and a tray of fruit with a cut lemon. Also, a young woman who is advancing towards Anne's bed holds a jug of wine and a drinking glass on a round dish. The drapes of the background, the velvet canopy over Anne's bed, the fringe of the tablecloths and blankets, and the lace on the bed sheets are depicted with intense accuracy. This painting has been associated with two drawings by her father as the sources of her inspiration.[6]
Another famous work by Orsola is her Still Life with Flowers, Fruit, Mushroom, Goldfinch, and Hoopoe. Since Orsola created still lifes over a long period of time, it is difficult to assign an exact date for when this image was created. Since it is made with a palette of bright colors, the paint is laid on the panel more thickly, and resembles a work she created late in her career, it has generally been accepted that this work was made in between 1645 and 1650. This work was originally attributed to Sister Orsola by the Italian art historian Mina Gregori. The atypical horizontal format of the painting suggests that it was meant to be set above a door, inserted in a wooden paneling of a wall, or to adorn a cabinet in a sacristy. The objects seem to be laid out on a windowsill set in a wall of a room that opens out onto a view of the sky which is flecked with gray clouds. The image stands out for its depiction of unusual species of plants and animals and its rhythmic composition which is formed around the alternations of color. The uncommon animals and plants in the image are the hibiscus, the Turk's-cap lily, the hoopoe, and the mushroom. The lifelike representation of the plant forms have led to the belief that Orsola used scientific prints and treatises to learn how to depict plant life realistically. The birds symbolize facets of Christianity since the goldfinch is a reference to the Passion of the Christ while the hoopoe is a symbol for sin. She also faithfully reproduces a large mushroom of the woodland clavaria species with its white, fleshy stem and yellow-ochre clustered branches. This mushroom alludes to life regenerated after death through fermentation or organic decomposition. Therefore, the mushroom is the third element in a symbolic triangle placed in the center of the composition between the two birds, which together symbolize sin, sacrifice, and resurrection.[7]
One of the other more well-known art pieces was ""St. Luke the Evangelist in the Studio"", which showed St. Luke in his studio, painting the Virgin Mary and baby Jesus. This was not just a comment about St. Luke but about her life and how this was actually what she saw on a daily basis. This was a great example of many of Orsola’s works. It is very busy and filled with details of real life. Something unique that Orsola touched on was that St. Luke was not just a painter but also a sculptor in her painting. The bookshelf behind him shows an ox and angels to show St. Luke was an evangelist and the flowers by Mary show her virtue.[8]
Gallery
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Natività (ca. 1621-1625)
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Fruit still life with a partridge
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Orsola Maddalena Caccia". Clara Database of Women Artists. National Museum of Women in the Arts. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
- 1 2 3 Italian Women Artist from Renaissance to Baroque (1 ed.). Italy: Skira Editore. 2007. p. 214. ISBN 88-7624-919-2.
- 1 2 3 4 Fonturnati, Vera, Jordana Pomeroy, and Claudio Strinati. “Orsoloa Maddalena Caccia”, Italian Women Artists: from Renaissance to Baroque. Washington, D.C.: National Museum of Women in the Arts, 2007. pg. 214
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Fonturnati, Vera, Jordana Pomeroy, and Claudio Strinati. “Orsoloa Maddalena Caccia”, Italian Women Artists: from Renaissance to Baroque. Washington, D.C.: National Museum of Women in the Arts, 2007. pg. 215
- 1 2 3 "St. Luke the Evangelist in the Studio" (PDF). National Museum of Women in Art. Retrieved 17 April 2015.
- 1 2 3 Fonturnati, Vera, Jordana Pomeroy, and Claudio Strinati. “Orsoloa Maddalena Caccia”, Italian Women Artists: from Renaissance to Baroque. Washington, D.C.: National Museum of Women in the Arts, 2007. pg. 216
- ↑ Fonturnati, Vera, Jordana Pomeroy, and Claudio Strinati. “Orsoloa Maddalena Caccia”, Italian Women Artists: from Renaissance to Baroque. Washington, D.C.: National Museum of Women in the Arts, 2007. pg. 218
- ↑ Peters, Danielle. "MEET MARY: AN EXPERIENCE OF SACRED ART". University of Notre Dame. Retrieved 17 April 2015.
Further reading
- MonferratoArte: Orsola Maddalena Caccia (Italian) A historical and bibliographical directory of artists active in the extra-urban Churches of the Diocese of Casale Monferrato.
- Bryan, Michael (1886). Robert Edmund Graves, ed. Dictionary of Painters and Engravers, Biographical and Critical (Volume I: A-K). York St. #4, Covent Garden, London; Original from Fogg Library, Digitized May 18, 2007: George Bell and Sons. p. 207.
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