
PROPERTY FROM THE ROSALINDE AND ARTHUR GILBERT COLLECTION
Auction Closed
December 4, 11:48 AM GMT
Estimate
30,000 - 50,000 GBP
Lot Details
Description
Property From The Rosalinde And Arthur Gilbert Collection
AN ITALIAN MICROMOSAIC PANEL OF TIVOLI, ROME SECOND HALF 19TH CENTURY
depicting the temples of Sibyl and Vesta, the St. Martino Bridge and the cascades of the Aniene River
without frame: 44.5cm. high, 71.5cm. wide; 1ft. 5 1/2 in., 2ft. 4 1/8 in.
with frame: 65cm. high, 92cm. wide, 11.5cm. deep; 2ft. 1 3/4 in., 3ft. 1/4 in. 4 1/2 in.
Possibly William Randolph Hearst (1863-1951);
Archbishop Edward Hoban, Rockford, Illinois;
acquired from Sloan Auctions, Washington D.C., 9 October 1977, lot 1359.
Los Angeles, 1979;
Vatican, Mosaici Minuti Romani Del '700 e Del '800, 15 October-30 November 1986;
Gilbert Collection, Permanent Display, Somerset House, London, 2000-2007.
J. H. Gabriel, with contributions by Anna Maria Massinelli and essays by Judy Rudoe and Massimo Alfieri, Micromosaics: The Gilbert Collection, London, 2000, cat. no. 101, p. 169.
A. González-Palacios, and Steffi Röttgen with essays by Steffi Röttgen, Claudia Przyborowski; essays and new catalogue material translated by Alla Theodora Hall, The Art of Mosaics: Selections from the Gilbert Collection, Los Angeles, 1982, cat. no. 100, p.205.
This vibrantly coloured panel, of unusually large scale, depicts a particular view of Tivoli, favoured by painters and Grand-Tour enthusiasts. The subject of the Temples of Vesta and Sibyl was widespread amongst mosaicists who saw the opportunity to reproduce the monuments as souvenirs of the Grand Tour for their aristocratic clientele. The present panel is an important example showing the temples, St. Martino bridge and the spectacular cascading waterfalls of the Aniene river.
Originally called Tibur, Tivoli was founded on the Monti Tiburtini (Tiburtine Hills) five centuries before Rome in 1215 B.C. and became known for its sulphur mineral water springs. Accessed from the St. Martino bridge, the so-called Temple of Sibyl, and nearby the Temple of Vesta were erected towards the end of the Roman Republic in the early first century BCE. As one of the most famous monuments of Ancient Tibur, the Temples of Sibyl and Vesta, although often confused with one another, were one of the most frequently drawn and painted sites in the 19th century.
The circular temple, a colonnaded round monoptera, was probably dedicated to Vesta, the goddess of the hearth, whose cult was entrusted to the Vestals, or perhaps to Tiburno, the hero who gave his name to the city. The Temple of Sibyl is supposedly dedicated to the Tiburtine Sybil or Albunea worshipped as a goddess in Tivoli and bestowed with prophetic powers.