CELESTI, Andrea - b. 1637 Venezia, d. 1712 Venezia - WGA

CELESTI, Andrea

(b. 1637 Venezia, d. 1712 Venezia)

Italian painter. He trained first with Matteo Ponzoni, then with Sebastiano Mazzoni; Mazzoni encouraged the development of a Baroque style, but Celesti was also attracted by the naturalism of the tenebrists. The first known works by Celesti are mature in style, and he had already achieved considerable fame in Venice when the Doge Alvise Contarini honoured him with the title of Cavaliere in 1681.

The complexity of his sources is evident in two canvases, Moses Destroying the Golden Calf and Moses Chastising the Hebrew People for their Idolatry, both painted c. 1681 for the Palazzo Ducale, Venice, and signed Cavaliere; they are influenced by Luca Giordano and by the narrative techniques of Jacopo Tintoretto. The most distinguished works of Celesti’s early period are two large lunettes that show three scenes: Benedict III Visiting St Zacharias, A Doge Presented with the Body of a Saint, and the Virtues Surrounding a Doge Holding the Model of St Zacharias (c. 1684; Venice, S Zaccaria). These luxuriant compositions represent a remarkable leap in quality from the paintings of the Palazzo Ducale, with lighter colours and a more flickering touch.

A little later Celesti left Venice for Brescia, perhaps by way of Rovigo; exactly when he arrived is not known, but he established himself and his studio there for several years. Panfilo Nuvolone and Francesco Paglia (1636-1713) had encouraged the development of a more exuberant Baroque style in Brescia, and in response Celesti created more decorative, lyrical works, such as his ecstatic St Rose of Lima (Brescia, S Clemente) with its brilliant display of glorious light. Most of Celesti’s paintings done in and around Brescia were religious canvases, but he also painted portraits, such as the two entitled Condottiero (Ljubljana, Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts) and the portrait of Conte Alberto di Baone (Dublin, National Gallery), executed in a dazzling array of colours.

In 1688 Celesti was active at Toscolano on Lake Garda, where he painted canvases of scenes from the Life of St Peter (Toscolano Cathedral) and in 1689 decorated the salone of the Palazzo Delay (now Palazzo Mafizzoli) with Old Testament scenes. In 1696 he was at Treviso, where he executed a Last Judgement for the cathedral (untraced) and in 1697, 1698 and 1699 pictures for the abbey of S Floriano at Linz, where his Paradise, for the high altar, remains in situ.

By 1700 Celesti was back in Venice, where he set up his studio; Venetian artists of this period, led by Giovanni Coli and Filippo Gherardi, were reviving the style of Veronese, and Celesti, following this trend, produced late works that employed more dazzling effects of colour and light. These works include the frescoed decoration of the Villa Rinaldi Barbini at Casella d’Asolo, where Celesti created a series of exotic and theatrical mythological and biblical scenes, distinguished by their luminosity and by their light and airy touch. His last works were three dramatic night scenes: the Birth of the Virgin, the Assumption of the Virgin and the Martyrdom of St Lawrence (1706-11; Verolanuova Cathedral). Celesti was much admired by Charles-Nicholas Cochin and by Jean-Honoré Fragonard, and his colour influenced the Rococo art of the early 18th century in Venice and in Austria.

Feast of Belshazzar
Feast of Belshazzar by

Feast of Belshazzar

The scene illustrates chapter 5 of the Old Testament Book of Daniel. Belshazzar, King of Babylon, gave a great feast at which wine was drunk in the golden and silver vessels looted by his father Nebuchadnezzar, from the temple in Jerusalem, and ‘gods of gold, and of silver, of brass, of iron, of wood, and of stone…which see not, nor hear, nor know’ were praised while God himself was not glorified. And there ‘came forth fingers of a man’s hand and wrote…upon the plaster of the wall’. Only the Jewish seer Daniel was able to read the supernatural inscription MENE TEKEL UPHARSIN which foretold the defeat - in fact, the death - of Belshazzar that same night and the partition of his kingdom among the Medes and the Persians.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 11 minutes):

George Frideric Handel: Belshazzar’s aria, choir, and martial symphony

King David Playing the Zither
King David Playing the Zither by

King David Playing the Zither

David, the shepherd boy who became the king of Israel, was a warrior, a statesman, and also a musician. He is traditionally believed to be the author of the Psalms. He is often represented in renaissance art playing a stringed instrument (usually a harp). The zither is a stringed instrument consisting merely of strings and a string bearer. Together with the lyre it was the main plucked instrument of antiquity.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 8 minutes):

Giovanni Bononcini: Sinfonia decima a 7

Presentation of Jesus at the Temple
Presentation of Jesus at the Temple by

Presentation of Jesus at the Temple

The knife offered to the priest is a clear reference to the circumcision, which confirms in blood the passage from the Old Covenant to the New, foreshadowing the moment of the Passion.

Project for a stucco and painted ceiling
Project for a stucco and painted ceiling by

Project for a stucco and painted ceiling

This project drawing was made for the ceiling of a salone in Palazzo Erizzo in Venice. The cartoon illustrates the deeds of Paolo Erizzo, 15th-century ancestor of the commissioning family, who was executed by Mehmed II after his heroic defence of Negroponte in 1469.

Queen Jezabel Being Punished by Jehu
Queen Jezabel Being Punished by Jehu by

Queen Jezabel Being Punished by Jehu

The Virgin and Child with the Infant St John Appearing to St Jerome and St Anthony
The Virgin and Child with the Infant St John Appearing to St Jerome and St Anthony by

The Virgin and Child with the Infant St John Appearing to St Jerome and St Anthony

With Andrea Celesti, Venetian art entered a new phase. He rejected harsh chiaroscuro for radiant, richly coloured paintings with soft forms and familiar figures.

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