Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
British Galleries, Room 53

Capitano Cerimonia and Signora Lavinia

Oil Painting
1742 (painted)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Object Type
Mural painting in a grand house was a sure indicator of wealth and status. Noble or wealthy families commissioned artists, often from France, The Netherlands or Italy, to decorate their homes with mythological, patriotic, allegorical or fantasy scenes, demonstrating the owner's learning, allegiance and sophisticated taste. These are a part of a series of 16 panels commissioned by Charles Calvert, 5th Baron Baltimore, in 1742 to decorate the 'Scaramouche Parlour' in his house, Belvedere, in Kent.

Subjects Depicted
The panels show scenes from the Commedia dell'Arte, a type of theatre performed by Italian troupes of travelling actors. The Commedia had a large number of stock characters: the actors would improvise around a general scenario. They were often masked, and the performances involved acrobatics, music and dancing. Characters included the Capitano, a swaggering, blustering coward who invariably runs from any threat of danger, Arlecchino (who became the Harlequin of pantomime), Pulcinella (who inspired the English Punch), Pedrolino (later Pierrot) and Colombine (a serving maid who later appears in amorous association with Harlequin or Pierrot). Most depictions of the Commedia characters are derived from a famous series of prints of Commedia-like performers, the Bali di Sfessania by the French artist Jacques Callot (1592-1635).

People
Andien de Clermont (active 1716-1783) was a French artist who arrived in Britain in 1716. He was the most avant-garde and highly-inventive decorative artist working here in the Rococo period.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleCapitano Cerimonia and Signora Lavinia (generic title)
Materials and techniques
oil on canvas
Brief description
Oil painting on canvas, 'Capitano Ceremonia and Signora Lavinia' from the Commedia dell'Arte, Andien de Clermont, 1742
Physical description
A grey-haired man dressed in garments of different shades of pink and holding a hat with two green feathers dangling from it stands before a lady dressed in aquamarine and a dusky pink. Both figures stand on a stage-like platform which merges as it recedes with a mock landscape setting with buildings in the background and another man and woman, with a dog, in the midground. The whole is enframed by a foliate and floral border. The mask fo a femal head appears top centre.
Dimensions
  • Height: 127cm
  • Width: 132.4cm
Dimensions checked: Measured; 06/09/1999 by LM
Gallery label
British Galleries: These panels are decorated with characters from Italian popular theatre. They were based on etchings by the French engraver Jacques Callot, published in Nancy, France in about 1625. The painter of the panels, Andien de Clermont, set them in light ornamental frameworks inspired by prints by the French painter Jean-Antoine Watteau (1684-1721). Such fanciful decorative frameworks were later taken up by English Rococo designers.(27/03/2003)
Object history
Sixteen panels were commissioned by Charles Calvert, 5th Baron Baltimore to decorate the 'Scaramouche Parlour' in his house, Belvedere, in Kent. Painted in England by Andien de Clermont (active 1716-83). The majority of the figures are taken from Jacques Callot's Balli di Sfessania, 1621; reproduced in Lieure catalogue de l'oeuvre gray de Callot, 1927, figs 379-402. Also reproduced with accompanying essay in Gerald Kahan Jacqcues Callot - Artist of the Theatre, 1976, pp.9-20. There has long been disagreement concerning the attribution of names to the three characters despicted in Callot's Frontispiece (Lieure 379). Hence P.24-1985 by de Clermont which is based on the frontispiece is descrived simply as Three Figures.
Provenance: Charles Calvert, 5th Lord Baltimore; Sir Simpson Gideon Bart, later lord Eardley; Lieutenant Colonel F. D. E. Freemantle; Sotherbys Monaco 8 February 1980, 124, 2. Purchased by the V&A in 1985.
Subjects depicted
Summary
Object Type
Mural painting in a grand house was a sure indicator of wealth and status. Noble or wealthy families commissioned artists, often from France, The Netherlands or Italy, to decorate their homes with mythological, patriotic, allegorical or fantasy scenes, demonstrating the owner's learning, allegiance and sophisticated taste. These are a part of a series of 16 panels commissioned by Charles Calvert, 5th Baron Baltimore, in 1742 to decorate the 'Scaramouche Parlour' in his house, Belvedere, in Kent.

Subjects Depicted
The panels show scenes from the Commedia dell'Arte, a type of theatre performed by Italian troupes of travelling actors. The Commedia had a large number of stock characters: the actors would improvise around a general scenario. They were often masked, and the performances involved acrobatics, music and dancing. Characters included the Capitano, a swaggering, blustering coward who invariably runs from any threat of danger, Arlecchino (who became the Harlequin of pantomime), Pulcinella (who inspired the English Punch), Pedrolino (later Pierrot) and Colombine (a serving maid who later appears in amorous association with Harlequin or Pierrot). Most depictions of the Commedia characters are derived from a famous series of prints of Commedia-like performers, the Bali di Sfessania by the French artist Jacques Callot (1592-1635).

People
Andien de Clermont (active 1716-1783) was a French artist who arrived in Britain in 1716. He was the most avant-garde and highly-inventive decorative artist working here in the Rococo period.
Bibliographic references
  • Kahan, G.Jacqcues Callot - Artist of the Theatre, 1976, pp.9-20
  • Lieure catalogue de l'oeuvre gray de Callot,/u>, 1927, figs 379-402
Collection
Accession number
P.22-1985

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Record createdMarch 27, 2003
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