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Tag: Sleeping

  • Blue Little Boy

    Little boy blue ...

    The narrator of the story has a grandson named Lachie who is just six weeks old. It is a hot day, and Lachie is having trouble sleeping. The narrator pulls out an old wooden cradle that they had made in a woodwork night class many years before for their son. They had now freshened up the cradle with a new coat of paint to give it a new beginning.

    The cradle was made for the narrator’s son, who is almost 37 years old now. It was a special project that they had made in a woodwork class. The fact that the cradle has lasted all these years and now is being used for a new life shows that it has been cared for and appreciated by the family.

    The fresh coat of paint is symbolic of a new beginning for the cradle. It is now being used for a new baby, and it is getting a fresh start. The narrator has taken the time to give it a new coat of paint, which shows that they care about the cradle and the baby that will use it.

    The cradle represents a new beginning for the narrator’s family. With the arrival of Lachie, the family is starting a new chapter in their lives. They now have a new member of their family to care for and love. The cradle is the first bed that Lachie will sleep in, and it is a symbol of the love and care that the family will provide for him.

    The story highlights the importance of new beginnings. Whether it is a new baby, a new job, or a new hobby, new beginnings can bring excitement and a fresh start to our lives. The cradle is a symbol of this idea. It has been given a new beginning with a fresh coat of paint, and it will bring comfort to Lachie as he starts his new life.

    The story also shows the value of traditions and family. The cradle was made many years ago for the narrator’s son, and now it is being passed down to Lachie. The family has cared for the cradle all these years, and it has become a cherished tradition in the family. It represents the love and care that has been passed down from generation to generation.

    In conclusion, the story of Lachie and the cradle represents the importance of new beginnings and the value of family traditions. The cradle has been given a fresh start with a new coat of paint, and it will bring comfort and love to a new family member. New beginnings can bring excitement and a fresh start to our lives, and traditions and family help us to carry on the love and care from generation to generation.

    Posted by judith511 on 2011-02-14 10:48:17

  • Close-Up of Dawn in Ceiling of Bedroom from the Sagredo Palace in Venice, ca. 1718

    Close-Up of Dawn in Ceiling of Bedroom from the Sagredo Palace in Venice, ca. 1718

    Close-Up of Dawn in Ceiling of Bedroom from the Sagredo Palace in Venice, ca. 1718

    Bedroom from the Sagredo Palace

    •Artist: Stuccowork probably by Abbondio Stazio (Swiss (active Italy), Mossagno, near Lugano 1663-1745 Venice)
    •Maker: and Carpoforo Mazzetti Tencalla (Swiss (active Italy), Bissone 1685-1743 Venice)
    •Date: ca. 1720 or later
    •Culture: Italian, Venice
    •Medium: Wood, stucco, marble, glass
    •Dimensions:
    oHeight: 25 ft. 2 in. (767.1 cm)
    oWidth: 18 ft. 2 in. (553.7 cm)
    oDepth: 13 ft. 2 in. (401.3 cm)
    •Classification: Woodwork
    •Credit Line: Rogers Fund, 1906
    •Accession Number: 06.1335.1a-d

    On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 507.

    In design and workmanship, this bedroom, consisting of an antechamber with a bed alcove, is one of the finest of its period. The decoration is in stucco and carved wood. In the antechamber, fluted Corinthian pilasters support an entablature out of which fly amorini bearing garlands of flowers. Other amorini bear the gilded frame of a painting by Gasparo Diziani, depicting dawn triumphant over night. Above the entry to the alcove seven amorini frolic, holding a shield with the monogram of Zaccaria Sagredo. A paneled wood dado with a red-and-white marble base runs around the room. The unornamented portions of the walls are covered with seventeenth-century brocatelle. The bed alcove has its original marquetry floor. The stuccowork is almost certainly done by Abbondio Statio and Carpoforo Mazetti Tencalla. The amorini are beautifully modeled and the arabesques of the doors are exquisitely executed. Everything in this bedroom forms a buoyant and joyful ensemble.

    Provenance

    Zaccaria Sagredo (until d. 1729); Sagredo family (by descent, until 1906; sold through Antonio Correr, Venice, to MMA).

    Timeline of Art History

    •Essays
    oVenice in the Eighteenth Century
    •Timelines
    oVenice and Northern Italy, 1600-1800 A.D.

    Dawn

    •Artist: Gaspare Diziani (Italian, Belluno 1689-1767 Venice)
    •Medium: Oil on Canvas
    •Dimensions: 78 × 94½ in. (198.1 × 240 cm)
    •Classification: Paintings
    •Credit Line: Rogers Fund, 1906
    •Accession Number: 06.1335.1b

    On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 507.

    Catalogue Entry

    Diziani, born in Belluno early in 1689, was reportedly sent to Venice for further study at the age of twenty. In due course he entered the Venice atelier of the Bellunese Gregorio Lazzarini, and later that of Sebastiano Ricci, by whom he was chiefly influenced. The French critic and connoisseur Pierre Jean Mariette states that for several years Diziani worked abroad, first in Munich, in 1717, and thereafter in Dresden. The artist returned to Venice no later than 1720 as he is listed in the “Fraglia dei pittori di Venezia” from 1720 to 1726. From time to time he is recorded in his native Belluno and he also visited Rome, but for the greater part of the balance of his life he remained in Venice, working there and in the surrounding region. Much of Diziani’s site-specific work is still in situ. Early in his career he had been a scenographer, though nothing survives of his production in this genre, and he was also a gifted and prolific draftsman.

    The Met’s painting by Diziani entered the collection as part of the decoration of the principal bedroom of Palazzo Sagredo on the Grand Canal in Venice, which was bought in its entirety and moved from the palace to New York in 1906 (06.1335.1a-d). The room belonged to a small private suite on two floors joined by private staircases, all decorated in the same extravagant style, and the wood- and plasterwork in one of them, dated 1718, is signed by the Swiss-born stuccatori Abbondio Stazio and his assistant Carpoforo Mazzetti Tencalla. It was at first assumed that the ceiling painting was of the same moment as the signed woodwork, and therefore commissioned by the great collector of drawings Zaccaria Sagredo, whose monogram is above the archway in the room and who died in 1729. Aikema (1997) convincingly argued that the bedroom may be somewhat later than the other rooms of the suite, and if work on the stucco ceiling decorations of the various rooms continued through the 1720s, then the painting of Dawn could be assigned to the 1730s. Zugni Tauro (1971) had dated the canvas to circa 1755-1760.

    Katharine Baetjer 2016

    Provenance

    Palazzo Sagredo, Venice (until 1906); [Antonio Carrer, Venice, 1906; sold to MMA].

    Exhibition History

    New York. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. “Venetian Paintings in the Metropolitan Museum,” May 1-September 2, 1974, no catalogue.

    References

    •Giuseppe Fiocco. Letter to Joseph Breck. September 29, 1925, attributes the ceiling painting to Gasparo Diziani.
    •Preston Remington. “A Bedroom from the Palazzo Sagredo at Venice.” Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 21, part 2 (April 1926), p. 14, dates the decoration of the Sagredo bedroom about 1718; notes that some if not all of the stucco decoration was executed in 1718 by Abbondio Stazio and Carpoforo Mazzetti-Tencalla, according to an inscription in a room above the one where the bedroom was located.
    •Harry B. Wehle. The Metropolitan Museum of Art: A Catalogue of Italian, Spanish, and Byzantine Paintings. New York, 1940, p. 279, ill.
    •Art Treasures of the Metropolitan: A Selection from the European and Asiatic Collections of The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Exh. cat., The Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York, 1952, p. 237, under no. 186.
    •Preston Remington. “The Galleries of European Decorative Art & Period Rooms.” Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 13 (November 1954), p. 127, ill. (detail of installation).
    •Josephine L. Allen and Elizabeth E. Gardner. A Concise Catalogue of the European Paintings in The Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York, 1954, p. 30.
    •Giovanni Mariacher. “L’arte dello stucco a Venezia nel ’700: Il Palazzo Sagredo a Santa Sofia.” Giornale economico (April 1961), p. 408.
    •G. Mariacher. Arte e artisti dei laghi lombardi. Vol. 2, Stuccatori ticinesi a Venezia tra la fine del ’600 e la metà del ’700. Como, 1964, pp. 83, 90 n. 6.
    •Anna Paola Zugni-Tauro. Gaspare Diziani. Venice, [1971], pp. 79–80, pl. 217, dates the painting between 1755 and 1760.
    •Burton B. Fredericksen and Federico Zeri. Census of Pre-Nineteenth-Century Italian Paintings in North American Public Collections. Cambridge, Mass., 1972, pp. 65, 468, 605.
    •Federico Zeri with the assistance of Elizabeth E. Gardner. Italian Paintings: A Catalogue of the Collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Venetian School. New York, 1973, pp. 25–26, pl. 24.
    •Howard Hibbard. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York, 1980, pp. 352, 354, fig. 637 (color).
    •Katharine Baetjer. European Paintings in The Metropolitan Museum of Art by Artists Born Before 1865: A Summary Catalogue. New York, 1995, p. 87, ill. p. 85.
    •James Parker in Period Rooms in The Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York, 1996, p. 70, ill. p. 71 (color), dates the painting about 1720.
    •Bernard Aikema. “‘Il famoso Abondio’: Abbondio Stazio e la decorazione a stucco nei palazzi veneziani, circa 1685-1750.” Saggi e memorie di storia dell’arte 21 (1997), p. 119 n. 66, dates the painting to the 1730s or 1740s.

    Timeline of Art History

    •Essays
    oVenice in the Eighteenth Century

    MetPublications

    •Italian Paintings: A Catalogue of the Collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Vol. 2, Venetian School
    •European Paintings in The Metropolitan Museum of Art by Artists Born before 1865: A Summary Catalogue
    •A Concise Catalogue of the European Paintings in the Metropolitan Museum of Art

    Posted by Autistic Reality on 2018-10-24 16:29:23

    Tagged: , Bedroom , Sagredo Palace , Venice , ca. 1718 , c. 1718 , Palace , Italy , Interior , Inside , Indoors , Structure , Downtown , Downstate , Metropolitan Museum , The Met , The Metropolitan Museum of Art , Metropolitan Museum of Art , Architecture , New York , New York State , New York City , State of New York , Building , Museum , Museums , Art , USA , US , United States , United States of America , America , New York County , Manhattan , Art Museum , Art Museums , Landmark , Central Park , Fifth Ave , Fifth Avenue , European Sculpture and Decorative Arts , Sculpture , Decorative , Arts , Europe , European Sculpture , European Decorative Arts , Decorative Arts , Italian Baroque , Italian , Baroque , Reception Room , Sleeping Quarters , Bedchamber , Reception , Room , Italian Baroque Style , Baroque Style , Sleeping , Quarters , 2018

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