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Moretti shows works by Italian Masters in Shanghai

Exhibiting at the Shanghai Fine Jewellery and Art Fair (Stand G5) at the Shanghai Exhibition Center (SEC), China, from 3 to 11 November 2012 for the first time, Moretti Fine Art will present fine works by masters of the Italian Renaissance and other periods to this new and exciting market.

One of the highlights will be a Florentine tondo, depicting The Holy Family with the Infant Saint John the Baptist and two shepherds by The Master of Memphis (active c.1500-1510).  When this panel appeared at auction in 1961 it was catalogued as by Filippino Lippi (c.1457-1504), son and pupil of Fra Filippo Lippi (c.1406-1459), but scholars, including Everett Fahy, Jonathan Nelson and Patrizia Zambrano, have subsequently attributed this tender devotional image to the anonymous Master of Memphis.  The latter, an unidentified assistant to Filippino, has been dubbed the Master of Memphis after a work in the collection of the Brooks Museum of Art, Memphis, Tennessee.  His paintings can be identified by the characteristically long and slender fingers and toes of his figures, their rather abrupt gestures and voluminous drapery, with numerous folds and pleats, all of which are evident in this work.  This tondo is similar to works attributed to Filippino himself, and thus also demonstrates the influence of Fra Filippo Lippi and Botticelli.  There is a particular, obvious delight in the details of the landscape in the background, the tiny plants and grasses in the foreground as well as the hazy blue mountains and towers of the town in the distance that is typical of Filippino.

Astronomy was a science associated in antiquity with Urania, one of the nine Muses whose task it was ‘to measure the heavens and consider the measurements of their movements’.  An Allegory of Astronomy by Giovanni Martinelli (1600-1659) is one of a series of four canvases, executed by the artist for the Rospigliosi family, dedicated to the arts of the Trivium and the Quadrivium (Architecture, Astronomy, Geometry and Painting).  Martinelli was one of a number of artists of the Italian Seicento who painted allegorical works of rare elegance.  Dating to the 1650s, this work was executed at a late stage in Martinelli’s career.  Inexplicably ignored by contemporary biographers and other old sources, Martinelli finally received the acknowledgement he deserves last year, on the 500th anniversary of his birth, when he was the subject of a monograph with essays dedicated to various aspects of his brilliant canvases and frescoes, both sacred and profane, as well as a small exhibition in his native town of Arezzo.

 

Moretti Fine Art

Fabrizio Moretti opened his gallery in Florence in 1999 with the inaugural exhibition From Bernardo Daddi to Giorgio Vasari and soon established a respected reputation in the field of Italian Old Masters.  The gallery works closely with the most notable scholars and public institutions and is known for its dedication to research and for handling works of the highest quality as well as for making this particular area more accessible to private collectors.  In 2005 Moretti opened a gallery in London followed in 2007 with the gallery in New York in collaboration with Adam Williams Fine Art, just steps from the Metropolitan Museum of Art.  In December 2011, Moretti Fine Art moved its London headquarters to 2a-6 Ryder Street in St James’s, SW1.   Moretti Fine Art takes part in the annual Master Paintings Week as well as being a regular exhibitor at TEFAF Maastricht, the Biennale des Antiquaires in Paris and the Biennale Internazionale del’ Antiquariato di Firenze.  In London in October 2012, the gallery participated in the first Frieze Masters, for which Fabrizio Moretti is a member of the Selection Committee.

Shanghai Fine Jewellery and Art Fair

Founded in 2007 by Nicolo Mori and Maximin Berko, the Shanghai Fine Jewellery and Art Fair (SFJAF) showcases many of the world’s most exclusive galleries, bringing together a carefully curated group of prestigious jewellers, modern and contemporary art pieces, archaeology and antiques dealers.

Event:  Shanghai Fine Jewellery and Art Fair, www.sfjaf.com, Stand G5

Dates:   3 to 11 November 2012

Location: Shanghai Exhibition Center (SEC)

1000 Central Yan’an Road, 200040 Shanghai

Opening hours:  Monday to Saturday, 12 pm to 7 pm

Wednesday and Sunday, 12 pm to 6 pm

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