"The Immensity of the Universe" in the Art of Giovanna Garzoni
Sillabe
Firenze, Gallerie degli Uffizi and Palazzo Pitti, May 28 - June 28, 2020.
Edited by Barker S.
English Text.
Livorno, 2020; paperback, pp. 264, 200 col. ill., cm 21x25.
Other editions available: Edizione italiana 88-3340-144
ISBN: 88-3340-151-0 - EAN13: 9788833401515
Subject: Essays (Art or Architecture),Monographs (Painting and Drawing),Painting
Period: 1400-1800 (XV-XVIII) Renaissance
Places: Tuscany
Languages:
Weight: 0.65 kg
Recognized as a protagonist in the evolution of scientific illustration, Giovanna Garzoni is in fact less known as an illustrator of the Baroque geographical imagery. In her harmonic and often small compositions the painter combines exotic objects of different origins -such as Chinese porcelain, nautilus from the Pacific Coast, Mexican pumpkins and flowers, South American plants or English lounge dogs- with the ultimate goal of amazing and amusing the viewer.
Born into a society in which women were not exactly encouraged to leave the confines of their homes, the painter was attracted to nature and exotic things since childhood. During her career, Garzoni's innate curiosity led her to travel to various Italian and European cities.
In the meantime the world had become bigger and more complex in Giovanna's lifetime. Maps that once had undefined areas and showed only coastal settlements were now filled in as Europeans traders, settlers and missionaries relayed home topographic knowledge of the Americas, Africa, India, Japan and China. Along with information came things: seeds, spices, artisanal goods, even live animals.
Europe's nobility prized these exotic imports for their utility, beauty, rarity and the scientific insights they provided. Garzoni found inspiration in the teeming variety of objects in her patrons' collections, the Medici family. Her artworks kindle the wondrous delight she felt upon encountering porcelain from Ming China, shells from the Gulf of California, marigolds from Mexico, and a lapdog from England. Seen through her curious eye, the exotic is naturalized and the marvelous is masterfully counterfeit-ed. Her art invites us to reflect upon the infinite complexity of the world, even its smallest parts.