Pope Innocent X thumbnail 1
Pope Innocent X thumbnail 2
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Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Europe 1600-1815, Room 7, The Sheikha Amna Bint Mohammed Al Thani Gallery

Pope Innocent X

Bust
ca. 1690 (cast)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This bust of Pope Innocent X is a pair to one of the later Pope, Alexander VIII Ottoboni (1610-1691; elected Pope 1689) also by Guidi; both bronze busts are in the V&A's collection. Guidi's portrait of Innocent X is ultimately based on an earlier terracotta model of 1650 by Alessandro Algardi (1598-1654), who was Guidi's master; this terracotta is now in the Museo Nazionale del Palazzo di Venezia (formerly it was in the Palazzo Odescalchi) in Rome. Guidi's terracotta version of this prototype by Algardi is in the Palazzo Doria Pamphili in Rome. Algardi's terracotta model, as well as several bronzes he had cast from that model, differ from Guidi's portrayals of the Pope, above all in the folds of the drapery, and other details of the vestments. Guidi clearly adapted his master's portrait after both Algardi's and Innocent X's deaths. He was probably commissioned to make a posthumous bronze portrait of Innocent for the then reigning Pope, Alexander VIII, to be paired with a portrait of Alexander himself, in about 1690 (the bust of Alexander is documented as being cast in April of that year). Innocent X had made the future Alexander VIII (then Pietro Ottoboni) a cardinal in 1652, and this may explain why the latter wanted his bust to be paired with that of his papal predecessor. A pair of Guidi's bronzes of Innocent X and Alexander VIII was formerly in the Ottoboni Palace in Rome; that bust of Innocent X is now lost, and only the Alexander VIII survives there.


Guidi unusually cast and finished his own bronzes, and so this was probably produced under his supervision. The high quality of its surface can be seen in the details of the vestments, such as the low relief birds and fleurs-de-lis encircled with foliate designs on the stole, as well as in the subtle representation of the facial features. This sculpture is in the tradition of monumental bronze portraits of Popes, such as the famous examples by Bernini and Algardi. The sweeping vestments and baroque naturalism, while actually rooted in classical traditions of Roman imperial busts, give these portraits immense presence and power. In addition to the likenesses of Innocent X by Algardi, this pontiff had also been portrayed in marble busts by Bernini, and in a celebrated painting by Diego Velázquez (1599-1660) of about 1650.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitlePope Innocent X (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Cast bronze
Brief description
Pope Innocent X by Domenico Guidi, after a model by Alessandro Algardi; bronze; Rome, Italy; cast ca.1690 (model ca.1654-66).
Physical description
Bronze bust of Bust of Pope Innocent X (Giambattista Pamphili) (1574-1655; elected Pope 1644). He is wearing the mozetto (or capuccio) round his shoulders and a stole embroidered with alternate doves and fleur-de-lis in scrolls. On his head is a berrettino.
Dimensions
  • Height: 93cm
  • Width: 85cm
  • Depth: 40cm
  • Weight: 82.5kg (Measured for Europe 1600-1800)
Measured by Conservation in 2011 for Princely Treasures touring exhibition. Dimensions slightly larger to allow for display case.
Object history
This bust was purchased in London with a matching one showing Pope Alexander VIII. Such a pairing proves that they cannot have been cast before the latter's election in 1689 and that therefore the present image must be posthumous.

On acquisition, both busts were given to Alessandro Algardi. Robinson (1862) suggested that this one was executed later by Bernini for Cardinal Ottoboni, while Fortnum (1876)ascribed the Innocent X bust to Algardi and the Alexander to the school of Bernini. The portraits are illustrated with the same attribution in the 1881 South Kensington Museum book. Subsequently, Maclagan and Longhurst (1932) assigned them to Bernini. The assocation with Algardi was largely on account of the bust's close similarity in all respects to Algardi's portraits of the Pope, notably a terracotta example in Palazzo Odescalchi, Rome. However its relationship with the bust of Alexander VIII furnishes a clue as to its actual maker, Domenico Guidi, for an inventory of 1780 another bust of Alexander was listed as by Guidi, along with an Innocent X ascribed to Algardi. In addition, a document dated 23 April 1690 (see Bershad 1970, n.??), indicates that the busts can be assigned to Domenico Guidi.

Domenico Guidi (1625-1701) trained with his uncle Giuliano Finelli in Naples before joining Algardi's workshop in Rome in 1647, where he remained active as a sculptor until his death. His major works include the Holy Family relief in the church of Sant'Agnese in Piazza Navona and the Lamentation in the Cappella Monte di Pieta. After Bernini's death in 1680 and that of Ercole Ferrata six years later, Guidi had the largest and most productive studio in Rome. His patrons included Louis XIV and Queen Christina, as well as a number of Popes, Cardinal and European nobles. Guidi was one of the few sculptors of the seventeenth century to cast and finish his own bronzes.

Using the standard model of his deceased master, Guidi strengthened the zig-zagging pattern of folds and altered some details in order to approximate his own style, as manifested in the bust of Alexander VIII that is its pair.

Algardi's original bust of about 1650 provides a deeply sensitive interpretation of the man and the pontiff, his tired and irascible eyes reflecting the bitterness of his many disappointments, together with an awareness of his power and the dignity of his role. It was carved in rivalry with Bernini, the more fiery sculptor of the two, who produced two portrait busts in marble of the same pope, both now in Palazzo Doria-Pamphili, Rome. Algardi's calm and contemplative image is probably physiognomically the more accurate, as can be gauged by comparison with a third, masterly portrait of Innocent, this time in paint, by Diego Velázquez.

The bust was perhaps in the collection of Cardinal Giovanni Francesco Albani, Rome; perhaps sold from the collection of M. Magnan de la Roquette in the sale of 22 November and following days, 1841, Paris; purchased from John Webb, London in 1853.
Production
by Domenico Guidi, after an original model by Alessandro Algardi.
Subject depicted
Summary
This bust of Pope Innocent X is a pair to one of the later Pope, Alexander VIII Ottoboni (1610-1691; elected Pope 1689) also by Guidi; both bronze busts are in the V&A's collection. Guidi's portrait of Innocent X is ultimately based on an earlier terracotta model of 1650 by Alessandro Algardi (1598-1654), who was Guidi's master; this terracotta is now in the Museo Nazionale del Palazzo di Venezia (formerly it was in the Palazzo Odescalchi) in Rome. Guidi's terracotta version of this prototype by Algardi is in the Palazzo Doria Pamphili in Rome. Algardi's terracotta model, as well as several bronzes he had cast from that model, differ from Guidi's portrayals of the Pope, above all in the folds of the drapery, and other details of the vestments. Guidi clearly adapted his master's portrait after both Algardi's and Innocent X's deaths. He was probably commissioned to make a posthumous bronze portrait of Innocent for the then reigning Pope, Alexander VIII, to be paired with a portrait of Alexander himself, in about 1690 (the bust of Alexander is documented as being cast in April of that year). Innocent X had made the future Alexander VIII (then Pietro Ottoboni) a cardinal in 1652, and this may explain why the latter wanted his bust to be paired with that of his papal predecessor. A pair of Guidi's bronzes of Innocent X and Alexander VIII was formerly in the Ottoboni Palace in Rome; that bust of Innocent X is now lost, and only the Alexander VIII survives there.


Guidi unusually cast and finished his own bronzes, and so this was probably produced under his supervision. The high quality of its surface can be seen in the details of the vestments, such as the low relief birds and fleurs-de-lis encircled with foliate designs on the stole, as well as in the subtle representation of the facial features. This sculpture is in the tradition of monumental bronze portraits of Popes, such as the famous examples by Bernini and Algardi. The sweeping vestments and baroque naturalism, while actually rooted in classical traditions of Roman imperial busts, give these portraits immense presence and power. In addition to the likenesses of Innocent X by Algardi, this pontiff had also been portrayed in marble busts by Bernini, and in a celebrated painting by Diego Velázquez (1599-1660) of about 1650.
Associated object
Bibliographic references
  • Inventory of Art Objects Acquired in the Year 1853. In: Inventory of the Objects in the Art Division of the Museum at South Kensington, Arranged According to the Dates of their Acquisition. Vol I. London: Printed by George E. Eyre and William Spottiswoode for H.M.S.O., 1868, p. 3.
  • The South Kensington Museum - Etchings and works of Art in the Museum. London: 1881, pl. 48.
  • Maclagan, Eric and Longhurst, Margaret H. Catalogue of Italian Sculpture. Text. London: Victoria and Albert Museum, 1932, p. 160.
  • Pope-Hennessy, John assisted by Lightbown, Ronald, Catalogue of Italian Sculpture in the Victoria and Albert Museum. Volume II: Text. Sixteenth to Twentieth Century. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office, 1964, p. 626, cat. 660; vol. III, fig. 655.
  • Montagu, Jennifer. Alessandro Algardi. New Haven and London, 1985, cat.156. D.I. p.431
  • Wittkower, Rudolf. Gian Lorenzo Bernini. The Sculptor of the Roman Baroque. Oxford, 1981, cat5. 51, p. 222
  • Avery, Charles in Weston-Lewis, Aidan (ed.), Effigies & Ecstacies. Roman Baroque Sculpture and Design in the Age of Bernini. [exh. cat., Natinal Gallery of Scotland, Edinburgh. 25 June-20 September 1998]. Edinburgh: National Gallery of Scotland, 1998, p.78, cat. no. 29.
  • McShane, Angela. In: Medlam, Sarah and Miller, Lesley Ellis (eds). Princely Treasures: European Masterpieces 1600-1800 from the Victoria and Albert Museum. [exh. cat.]. London: V&A Publishing, 2011, pp.22-23, cat. no. 8
  • Paillet, Charles and Croze-Magnan, Simon-Célestin. Catalogue de tableaux des diverses écoles, dessins et estamples encadrés et en feuilles, objets d'art et de curiosité, tels que bustes, figures et fragments antiques en marbres....deux bustes colossals en bronze, des Papes Innocent X et Alexandre VIII... Imprimerie et lithographie de Maulde et Renou, 1841.
  • Robinson, John Charles. Italian Sculpture of the Middle Ages and Period of the Revival of Art. A descritpive catalogue of the works forming the above section of the Museum, with additional illustrative notices. London, 1862, pp. 184-185.
  • Snodin, Michael and Llewellyn, Nigel (eds.), Baroque 1620-1800. Style in the Age of Magnificence, exh. cat., V&A Publishing, London, 2009
  • Fortnum, Charles Drury Edward. Descriptive Catalogue of the Bronzes of European Origin in the South Kensington Museum. London, 1876, p.7, pl. II.
  • Bershad, David L. 'A Series of Papal Busts by Domenico Guidi' in The Burlington Magazine, CXII, (1970), pp. 805-811.
  • Heimbürger Ravalli, Minna. Alessandro Algardi Scultore. Rome, 1973, p.118, cat. 36a
  • Medlam, S. and Ellis Miller, L. (eds.) Princely Treasures: European Masterpieces 1600-1800 from the Victoria and Albert Museum. London: V&A Publishing, 2011.
Collection
Accession number
1088-1853

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Record createdNovember 13, 2002
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