As parts of its exhibition on Francesco Noletti, the University of Malta’s Department of History of Art will be hosting a public lecture by Gianluca Bocchi titled ‘Francesco Noletti e i Pittori di Tappeti a Roma nel Seicento.’ The lecture will tomorrow at 5pm at the University of Malta Valletta Campus and will be given in Italian.
Francesco Noletti (c.1611–54), called il Maltese (and popularly known as Francesco Fieravino) is one of the most significant – yet enigmatic artists – in the study of still-life painting of the Roman seicento. His work encapsulates the spirit of the baroque still-life, primarily through a typology of ‘carpet paintings’ that he popularised in Rome during the 1640s and early 1650s. Noletti is credited with having significantly imprinted theatrically-placed heavy folded carpets as the primary focus of his impressive still-life compositions, with such folds animating and dominating the painting rather than being merely tactile covers of tables or ledges on which the objects were placed. The thick impasto and monumental folds of Noletti’s carpets imbued his works with a forceful movement, tactile richness and theatricality that responded perfectly to the baroque manner of the ‘main-stream’ artists.
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