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Antonio Joli (1700 c. —
Napoli 1777)
Joli was born in Modena and
served an apprenticeship in Rome and in
Venice. He then worked throughout Italy and abroad
gaining a reputation as a stage designer and landscape
painter. His paintings become known, as I have
indicated, for their, what we would call,
"photographic" quality; that is, they display a clear
and objective style of representing nature as well as
man-made artifacts. Joli worked in Naples for the
Bourbon court starting in the late 1750s; he worked on
stage design for the San
Carlo theater and the Teatrino (small theater)
at the royal palace in Caserta. He
painted many highly detailed scenes of court life in
Naples. The best known of these is probably the Departure
of Charles of Bourbon for Spain in 1759, on the
occasion of that monarch's abdication and return to
Spain to assume the throne as King of Spain. (The
painting is on display in the national
museum of San Martino in Naples.)
![]() Besides
the painting of the Spirito Santo street scene that
accompanies this article, Joli is also known for a
rendition of the royal procession along the Chiaia in
Naples towards the church
of the Madonna of Piedigrotta. The painting is
very realistic, with no attempt to make the scene
"folkloristic" in any way—something which other
painters often used to do with this popular yearly
ritual. Joli was also one of the first to produce
so-called "bird's-eye" perspective. His best-known
example is a painting of the then newly excavated
archaeological site at Paestum
(above), showing the temples and plains of the ancient
Greek city as seen from above.
Because of the accuracy of his work, he was popular
among the Grand Tourists
of the day, who wanted real-life views of Naples to
take home with them. [Also see
Joli's painting of the Neapolitan
Cuccagna.]
other paintings: Oswald Achenbach
Gasparo Vanvitelli (van Wittel) Renoir, Pierre-Auguste Lois Mailou Jones Giacinto Gigante Anton Pitloo Coleman, Charles Caryl |