The Triumph of Painting on Parnassus
Artist/Maker
Pietro Testa
(Italian, 1611–1650)
Dateca. 1642
MediumEtching
DimensionsImage/Sheet: 19 × 28 7/16 in. (48.3 × 72.2 cm)
Credit LineFriends of Art Endowment Fund
Object number1981.46
Status
Not on viewA significant figure of the Italian Baroque, Testa was a prolific etcher, often finding more success in his printed work than in his paintings. In the complicated iconography of this print, Testa gives idealized form to his preferred topics: the creative process and the intellectual nature of the painting profession. On Mount Parnassus, home of the muses, the chariot of Painting enters into a scene that illustrates the struggles and passions the artist must conquer and express, particularly the extremes of pleasure and pain, as represented by the pair of lovers and the figure attacked by serpents at left. Painting is crowned by the Three Graces as she rolls over the figure of Envy under the chariot’s wheels, passing underneath a triumphal arch of the rainbow bearing the figure of Iris, to greet the muses at right.
Exhibition History
The Art of Allusion: Allegorical Images of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (June 13, 1989 - August 13, 1989 )
Setting the Scene: Landscaping in Prints and Drawings from the 16th through the 19th Centuries
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (September 10, 1993 - November 7, 1993 )
Between Fact and Fantasy: The Artistic Imagination in Print
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (January 17, 2014 - June 22, 2014 )
Collections
- European
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early 17th century
ca. 1405
ca. 1649