The Continence of Scipio (Batoni)

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The Continence of Scipio
Pompeo Batoni - Continenza di Scipione (c.1771).jpg
Artist Pompeo Batoni
Year1771
Type Oil on canvas, history painting
Dimensions226.5 cm× 297.5 cm(89.2 in× 117.1 in)
Location Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg

The Continence of Scipio is a 1771 history painting by the Italian artist Pompeo Batoni. [1] It depicts a scene from the Siege of Carthage during the Second Punic War when Scipio Africanus, a general of the Roman Republic, refused to accept a ransom for an aristocratic female prisoner and released her to her fiancée. The story of Scipio's clemency is told by Livy and has been a popular subject for artists.

Although best-known for his portrait paintings of Grand Tourists, the Rome-based Batoni also produced scenes from religious and classical history. The style of the painting indicates his shift in his later career towards a more painterly form of classicism. [2] The painting was commissioned by Count Shuvalov in 1768 on behalf of Catherine the Great for a sum of around 1,700 scudi. [3] The Empress also commissioned a pendant Thetis Takes Achilles from the Centaur Chiron. [4] Today both works are in the collection of the Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg. [5]

References

  1. Bowron & Kerber p.109-10
  2. Milam p.54
  3. Bowron & Kerber p.176
  4. Bowron & Kerber p.109
  5. Clark p.106

Bibliography