Orfeo Boselli

Orfeo Boselli, or Bosselli, (1597–1667) was an Italian sculptor working in Rome. As with most Roman sculptors of the sixteenth through the eighteenth centuries, a great part of his commissioned work was in restoring and completing fragmentary ancient Roman sculptures.

Biography

He was a pupil of François Duquesnoy, whose classicising "Greek" manner[1] was the antithesis to Gian Lorenzo Bernini's. Boselli was a member of the prestigious Accademia di San Luca in Rome, in which he served as its Principe for the year 1667 until his death on September 23.

Boselli's Osservationi della Scoltura antica

Theories of proportions as exhibited in sculpture and dialogues on the relative merits of painting and sculpture were common enough in Renaissance and Baroque Italy, but they remained theoretical and rarely descended to the artisanal level. The treatise by Pomponius Gauricus, De sculptura offers a passage on bronze-casting by the lost-wax method. The Proemio of Giorgio Vasari's Le Vite de' più eccellenti pittori, scultori, ed architettori presents some workshop information on the practices of the architect, the sculptor and the painter. Only two sculptors have left extensive written material detailing the practice of their art. One, well known, is Benvenuto Cellini's Trattato dell'Oreficeria e della Scultura, 1568. The other, not published until 1939 and known only to art historians, is Orfeo Boselli's manuscript Osservationi della Scoltura antica written in the 1650s. It is conserved in the Corsini library in Rome.[2] The treatise is apparently a distillation of the lectures he gave at the Accademia.

Works

Orfeo Boselli provided marble sculptures to designs made by Martino Longhi the Younger in 1642-1643 for the high altar designed by Longhi in the church of San Carlo ai Catinari, 1643-1651, in Rome.[3]

Among sculptures restored by Boselli, he mentions in the Osservationi the Colonna Claudius that is now in the Prado, Madrid.[4]

Some other sculptors in Rome renowned for their restorations

Notes

  1. "The more subtle the contour is, the more the manner is Greek", Boselli wrote in his Osservationi, "and the more the contours serve to locate the principal parts at their proper places, the more excellent they are." (Noted in Estelle Lingo, "The Greek Manner and a Christian "Canon": François Duquesnoy's 'Saint Susanna'" The Art Bulletin 84.1 (March 2002, pp. 65-93) p. 68. Lingo discusses the pursuit of what was considered a "Greek" manner in the Roman circle of Duquesnoy, which included Boselli.
  2. It was analyzed in Phoebe Dent Weil, "Contributions toward a History of Sculpture Techniques: 1. Orfeo Boselli on the Restoration of Antique Sculpture," Studies in Conservation 12.3 (August1967), pp. 81-101; Ms Weil published the full text at Florence, 1978.
  3. Alessandra Anselmi, "The High Altar of S. Carlo ai Catinari, Rome" The Burlington Magazine 138 No. 1123 (October 1996), pp. 660-667.
  4. Illustrated in Irving Lavin, "Afterthoughts on "Bernini's Death" The Art Bulletin 55.3 (September 1973)0, pp. 429-436) fig.14, p, 434.

Further reading

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