Old Masters

Old Masters

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 78. LORENZO PASINELLI | REBECCA AND ELIEZER AT THE WELL.

LORENZO PASINELLI | REBECCA AND ELIEZER AT THE WELL

Lot Closed

June 11, 03:25 PM GMT

Estimate

5,000 - 7,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

LORENZO PASINELLI

Bologna 1629 - 1700

REBECCA AND ELIEZER AT THE WELL


oil on canvas

canvas: 44½ by 58⅛ in.; 113 by 147.6 cm.

framed: 53 by 67 in.; 134.6 by 170.2 cm.

The life of the Bolognese artist Lorenzo Pasinelli was recorded by his student and biographer, Giampietro Zanotti (1674-1765).1 Pasinelli trained in the studio of Simone Cantarini, one of Guido Reni's most talented pupils, and at the same time studied at the Accademia del Disegno under Alessandro Tiarini, Francesco Albani, and Michele Desubleo. After Cantarini's death in 1648, Pasinelli joined the workshop of Flaminio Torri, and three years later set out to establish his own career, quickly building a reputation as one of the leading masters of Bologna, rivaled only by that of Carlo Cignani. Over the next few decades, he received numerous international commissions and ran a workshop that flourished until he closed it in 1698, two years before his death. Among his most prominent students were Giovanni Gioseffo dal Sole, Gian Antonio Burrini, Aureliano Milani, and Donato Creti.


Pasinelli’s narrative ability is evident in this painting which illustrates the moment when Eliezer asks Rebecca to quench his thirst with the water she drew from the well (Genesis 24:17). In the passage, Abraham sends his servant, Eliezer, to find a wife for his son Isaac, and during his journey, Eliezer prays that Isaac’s future wife would give water to him and his camels. Although Pasinelli omitted the camels from this painting, their presence is suggested through the two figures in the background carrying jars on their heads, who are likely Rebecca's maidens on their way to bring water to the camels. Meanwhile, the elegant and sheer silk scarf Eliezer offers Rebecca in gratitude, foreshadows the proposal of marriage.


This was a subject that Pasinelli explored in other paintings as well, including one in a private collection, Bologna2 and another in the G.M.B. collection, Vignola.3 All three works share specific motifs, such as the maidens carrying jars in the background, the turbans of some figures, and the undulating jar Rebecca holds in her hands. The two paintings in Italian private collections, however, differ subtly from this painting, particularly in their representation of the story, for they explicitly show Eliezer drinking water from Rebecca's jar.


We are grateful to Professor Daniele Benati for suggesting the attribution to Lorenzo Pasinelli on the basis of photographs. He dates this painting to Pasinelli's youthful period, circa 1657, given its stylistic connection to Cristo va con i Santi Padri a visitare la Madre in Chiesa di San Girolamo della Certosa, Bologna.4


1. G. Zanotti, Nuovo fregio di gloria a Felsina sempre pittrice nella vita di Lorenzo Pasinelli pittor bolognese, Bologna 1703. Translation: A Glorious New Honor for Felsina, Perpetual City of Painters, in the Life of Lorenzo Pasinelli, Bolognese Painter


2. See C. Baroncini, Vita e opere di Lorenzo Pasinelli (1629-1700), Faenza 2010, p. 199, cat. no. 23, reproduced fig. XVII.


3. Ibid, p. 230, cat. no. 39, reproduced fig. XXVIII.


4. Ibid, p. 173, cat. no. 14, reproduced figs. VIII, IX, and X.