Antonio Cavallucci
Antonio Cavallucci was an eighteenth-century Italian painter of religious scenes and portraits. One of the leading Roman Neoclassical painters, Cavallucci was influenced by Pompeo Batoni and Anton Raphael Mengs. There is in his art some of the northern European feeling that had made its way into Rome at the end of the eighteenth century.
Biography
Early career
Cavallucci was born in Sermoneta in the Lazio. His artistic talents were recognized in an early stage by Francesco Caetani, Duke of Sermoneta in 1738-1810. In 1765, he brought the 13-year-old Cavallucci to Rome, where he became a pupil of Stefano Pozzi and three years later of Gaetano Lapis. He also studied drawing at the Accademia di San Luca.His earliest work dates from the mid-1760s. It is a tempera frieze in the Casa Cavallucci in Sermoneta. His first portrait was of his benefactor Duke Francesco Caetani. This portrait is only preserved as an engraving in 1772 by Pietro Leone Bombelli.
His first major commission was the decoration of five audience chambers in the Caetani Palace in Rome in 1776. He painted mythological scenes and allegories appropriate for each room. Three pictures from 1773 – Abigail before David, the Departure of Hector and Andromache and the Crucifixion with Saints – all demonstrate a tempered academic style, fluid plasticity and delicate manner.
Mature career
Cavallucci’s most distinguished work for the Caetani began in 1776 when he was commissioned to decorate five audience chambers in the Palazzo Caetani, Rome, with canvases showing mythological scenes and familial allegories appropriate to the individual theme of each room. The assured style of these pictures confirms Cavallucci’s reputation as one of the foremost Neoclassical artists in Rome in the late 18th century, but they equally reveal a new, neo-Baroque tendency in the reformulation of 16th-century precedents, especially those derived from Raphael.During the 1770s and early 1780s Cavallucci continued to produce portraits, notably those of Francesco Caetani and his first wife Teresa Corsini, Duchess of Sermoneta. In 1786 he painted the Presentation of the Virgin for Spoleto Cathedral and was admitted to the Accademia di San Luca. The most outstanding picture of this period was the Origin of Music, its iconographic inspiration drawn from Cesare Ripa’s Iconologia.
Later career
In his later years Cavallucci frequently travelled in Italy, in 1787 notably in the retinue of his patron, the nephew of pope Pius VI Cardinal Romoaldo Braschi-Onesti. In Rome he received numerous commissions from members of the Braschi family, including Pius VI, whose portrait he is said to have executed c. 1788 along with that of Romoaldo Braschi-Onesti.By 1788 Cavallucci belonged to the Academy of Arcadia and in that year was also admitted to the Pontifical Academy of Fine Arts and Letters of the Virtuosi al Pantheon. In 1791 he painted the Investiture of St. Bona for Pisa Cathedral and in 1793 was in Naples, where he portrayed the Principe del Belvedere. He also worked for Cardinal Francesco Saverio de Zelada, who collected many of his paintings and for whom in 1793 he decorated the Cappella del Carmelo in the Cardinal’s titular church, San Martino ai Monti, Rome. Cavallucci died in Rome in 1795. Among his pupils were the Portuguese painter Domingos Sequeira and the Roman painters Giovanni Micocca and Tommaso Sciacca.
Cavallucci is said to have painted St Benedict Joseph Labre while the saint was in ecstasy, or, having seen the saint in ecstasy, to have brought him to his studio and painted his portrait there.