Currently not on view

Beggar Carrying a Child on His Shoulder,

1630s–40s

Guercino (Giovanni Francesco Barbieri), 1591–1666; born Cento, Italy; died Bologna, Italy
x1948-1304

This drawing clearly attests to Guercino’s standing as one of the most creative and prolific caricaturists of the seventeenth century. The word caricature comes from the Italian caricatura, indicating something “loaded” or “charged.” Caricature drawings are “loaded” as they exaggerate specific features or make odd juxtapositions that emphasize difference. Guercino’s caricatures are marvelous examples of his fertile imagination, and of his curiosity and gentle humor, yet at the same time they reveal the artist’s keen and compassionate observation of humanity
Guercino’s caricatures grew out of the revolutionary naturalism in painting developed by the Carracci (Annibale, Agostino, and Ludovico) and their followers in Bologna beginning in the early 1580s. The Carracci’s innovative curriculum of drawing instruction emphasized nature’s unidealized beauty as a primary source for artists. Although Leonardo da Vinci had made influential physiognomic studies of old men and women at the beginning of the sixteenth century, these had a scientific focus and a penchant for the grotesque that were quite different from the simple humor produced in the Carracci’s sketches.

Information

Title
Beggar Carrying a Child on His Shoulder
Dates

1630s–40s

Medium
Pen and brown ink and brush and light yellow-brown wash on beige laid paper
Dimensions
20.3 × 15.8 cm (8 × 6 1/4 in.) frame: 54.3 × 41.6 × 2.7 cm (21 3/8 × 16 3/8 × 1 1/16 in.)
Credit Line
Bequest of Dan Fellows Platt, Class of 1895
Object Number
x1948-1304
Inscription
Inscribed recto on folio, upper center, in red pencil: 16; on recto of folio, faint (probably ink) numbers, top center and bottom center edges, have been largely removed, causing brown stains
Marks/Labels/Seals
There is a partial watermark with a quadruped inside a circle on the left edge of the folio.
Reference Numbers
Gibbons 290
Culture
Type
Materials

This folio (along with eight others) was removed from the album by the Savile Gallery prior to Platt’s purchase of the album in 1928. In 1929 he bought back all nine, including this one, which had been cut down, presumably while at the Savile Gallery.;