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FINE ART : PAINTINGS

Title

Boy with Vegetables

Object Name

Painting

Maker

Description

Born in Milan, Ceruti trained there and absorbed the north Italian interest in still-life painting associated with the work of Caravaggio. In northern Italy during the eighteenth century a fashion developed for paintings of peasants and beggars. Ceruti developed this genre by incorporating still-life details of game and vegetables and giving his peasants a new sense of dramatic solemnity. His work earned him the nick-name ‘il pitocchetto’ the painter of beggars. In 1721 Ceruti moved to Brescia where he produced an important early series of beggar and pilgrim scenes depicting the ragged poor that were quite unlike any previous representations of the genre. Ceruti’s Brescian beggar scenes are large in scale and devoid of the comic and anecdotal qualities usually associated with this style of painting. This late work is one of a pair of possible ‘over –doors’ in which Ceruti returns to his early theme of ‘portaroli’ or basket-carriers. Physical Description: A young boy wearing a red cap and torn clothing displays his basket's contents on a table. Cabbages and garlic.

Materials

oil on canvas

Catalogue Number

BELUM.U19

Copyright

National Museums NI