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Oil Paintings
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MOLA, Pier Francesco Italian Baroque Era Painter, 1612-1666
Painter and draughtsman, son of (1) Giovanni Battista Mola. His most characteristic works are small, intensely romantic scenes from mythology, the Bible, and from works by the poet Torquato Tasso, set in landscapes inspired by Venetian art. Yet he also received important public commissions for frescoes and altarpieces, and in his mature work he achieved an impressive synthesis of 17th-century Roman gran maniera painting with the stronger chiaroscuro and richer palette of the 16th-century Venetian style. He was a prolific and versatile draughtsman, who drew for pleasure as well as in preparation for commissions; he was also a witty caricaturist, who mocked himself and his friends as much as more typical targets |
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MOLA, Pier Francesco St Peter Freed from Prison dh c. 1630
Oil on canvas
Galleria Borghese, Rome
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MOLA, Pier Francesco Jacob's Meeting with Rachel oil on canvas
The Hermitage, St. Petersburg.
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MOLA, Pier Francesco Herminia and Vafrino Tending the Wounded Tancred Oil on canvas
Mus??e du Louvre, Paris.
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MOLA, Pier Francesco Barbary Pirate with a Bow 1650
Oil on canvas
Mus??e du Louvre, Paris.
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MOLA, Pier Francesco Herminia and Vafrino Tending the Wounded Tancred (mk05) Canvas 27 x 36 1/4''(69 x 93 cm)Acquired for Louis XIV in 1685
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MOLA, Pier Francesco Barbary Pirate with a Bow (mk05) Canvas,67 1/2 x 48 1/2''(172 x 123 cm)Acquired in 1948
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MOLA, Pier Francesco Self-portrait mk65
Pastel on paper
13 11/16x9 13/16in
Uffizi,Cabinet of Drawings and Prints
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MOLA, Pier Francesco Herminie gardant ses troupeaux grave sur un arbre le nom de Tancrede mk70
H.0.69
L.0.92
Paris,Musee du Louvre
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MOLA, Pier Francesco Self-Portrait mk156
1650-66
Pastel on paper
34.7x24.9cm
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MOLA, Pier Francesco THe Rest on the Flight into Egypt mk170
1630-1635
Oil on canvas
3.5x45.7cm
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MOLA, Pier Francesco Virgin Annunciate 1608-09 Marble, over life-size Museo dell'Opera del Duomo, Orvieto Mochi first achieved fame with his Angel of Annunciation of 1603-05 for the Orvieto Cathedral, a work whose vigour and directness reflect the artist's earnestness in reformulating a conventional theme. Three years lie between the Angel of Annunciation and the Virgin Annunciate which completed the composition. Here Mochi evoked reminiscences of Rome, in particular the suavity of Mariani and the more active type of Classical statuary, but added his own flair for dramatic gestures by showing the Virgin starting from her chair. Mochi's work has sometimes been explained as a response to Caravaggio, yet it is better understood as part of a general concern with conveying emotions through external expressions, something manifests in the work of Carracci and Reni, as well as that of Caravaggio. Interestingly enough, the forcefulness of Mochi's Virgin Annunciate was not to the liking of the Bishop of Orvieto, who opposed its placement in the cathedral for three years. See also the Angel of Annunciation. Author: MOCHI, Francesco Title: Virgin Annunciate , 1601-1650 , Italian Form: sculpture , religious
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MOLA, Pier Francesco
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Italian Baroque Era Painter, 1612-1666
Painter and draughtsman, son of (1) Giovanni Battista Mola. His most characteristic works are small, intensely romantic scenes from mythology, the Bible, and from works by the poet Torquato Tasso, set in landscapes inspired by Venetian art. Yet he also received important public commissions for frescoes and altarpieces, and in his mature work he achieved an impressive synthesis of 17th-century Roman gran maniera painting with the stronger chiaroscuro and richer palette of the 16th-century Venetian style. He was a prolific and versatile draughtsman, who drew for pleasure as well as in preparation for commissions; he was also a witty caricaturist, who mocked himself and his friends as much as more typical targets
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