THE CARAVAGGESQUE

THE CARAVAGGESQUE

980 Madison Ave New York, NY 10075, USA Thursday, January 20, 2022–Friday, March 11, 2022



 

self-portrait by david de haen

David de Haen

Self-Portrait

Not for Sale

apollo flaying marsyas by jan janssens

Jan Janssens

Apollo Flaying Marsyas

Price on Request

saint matthew and the angel by nicolas regnier

Nicolas Regnier

Saint Matthew and the Angel

Not for Sale

judith and holofernes by andrea vaccaro

Andrea Vaccaro

Judith and Holofernes

Price on Request

david with the head of goliath by giuseppe vermiglio

Giuseppe Vermiglio

David with the head of Goliath

Not for Sale

Robilant+Voena is the world's premier gallery for the works of Caravaggio and his followers. Their latest exhibition in New York City unites an exceptional group of paintings by Caravaggesque artists.  

Miraculous and highly unorthodox, the paintings of Caravaggio stunned the young painters from northern Europe arriving in Rome in the seventeenth century.  These encounters generated a revolution in painting across the continent. Painters from Italy, France, Spain and the Netherlands embraced and reinterpreted Caravaggio’s signature innovations, namely his merciless realism, his theatrical approach to narrative and his dramatic lighting effects.  

The exhibition features a selection of works by artists who took up key subjects made famous by Caravaggio, rendering them often in the highly naturalistic and distinctively tenebrist style he pioneered.  Andrea Vaccaro’s Judith with the Head of Holofernes and Giuseppe Vermiglio’s David with the Head of Goliath reference the master’s brutal decapitation scenes derived from the Bible, while Jan Janssens’ Apollo and Marsyas explores a similarly violent theme, in this instance drawn from classical mythology. Nicolas Tournier’s Roman Charity reprises a theme made famous by Caravaggio in his Seven Acts of Mercy altarpiece for the Pio Monte della Misericordia in Naples, just as Nicolas Régnier’s Saint Matthew and the Angel recalls Caravaggio’s famously rejected altarpiece for the Contarelli chapel in Rome.  

The Basket of Fruit by Bartolomeo Cavarozzi from the Barberini collection amplifies to monumental scale the master’s iconic still life now in the Ambrosiana, while Caravaggio’s musicians, laughing youths, and bravos find echoes in another intimately scaled canvas by Régnier, a self-portrait by David de Haen, and an image of a soldier by Theodoor Rombouts.