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Armida Abandoned by Rinaldo by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo

Armida Abandoned by Rinaldo

Giovanni Battista Tiepolo·c. 1742–45

Historical Context

Armida Abandoned by Rinaldo completes the narrative arc of Tiepolo's Tasso cycle, showing the sorceress's despair as her beloved knight departs. The subject allowed Tiepolo to paint an emotionally charged scene of feminine grief within a dramatic landscape setting. The rejected enchantress was one of the most sympathetic figures in Italian literature, and Tiepolo invests her abandonment with genuine pathos despite the decorative elegance of the composition.

Technical Analysis

The dramatic sky and windswept draperies heighten the emotional intensity. Tiepolo's palette shifts to cooler, more turbulent tones than the earlier scenes, with vigorous brushwork in the sky suggesting the emotional storm of the narrative.

Look Closer

  • ◆Notice the dramatic sky and windswept draperies heightening the emotional intensity of Armida's despair as Rinaldo departs — the sorceress's grief visible in every gesture.
  • ◆Look at the cooler, more turbulent palette compared to earlier Tasso scenes, with vigorous brushwork in the sky suggesting the emotional storm of the narrative.
  • ◆Observe the rejected enchantress — one of the most emotionally charged female figures in Baroque and Rococo painting.

Provenance

Possibly one of four scenes from Tasso made for the 'gabinetto degli specchi' of the Palazzo Corner a San Polo, Venice [according to inventories and other documents discussed by Romanelli 1998]. Count Giovanni Serbelloni, Venice in 1838; by descent, until possibly 1886 [Molmenti 1911 and Knox 1978]. Giulio Cartier, Genoa by 1908 [Malaquzzi Valeri 1908]; Sedelmeyer Gallery, Paris, in 1912 [Ojetti 1912]; James Deering (d. 1925), Vizcaya, from 1913 [information sheet in curatorial file]; bequeathed, 1925.

See It In Person

Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Gallery: Gallery 215

Visit museum website →

Quick Facts

Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
186.7 × 259.4 cm
Era
Rococo
Style
Venetian Rococo
Genre
Landscape
Location
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago
Gallery
Gallery 215
View on museum website →

More by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo

Armida Encounters the Sleeping Rinaldo by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo

Armida Encounters the Sleeping Rinaldo

Giovanni Battista Tiepolo·c. 1742–45

Rinaldo and the Magus of Ascalon by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo

Rinaldo and the Magus of Ascalon

Giovanni Battista Tiepolo·c. 1742–45

Rinaldo and Armida in Her Garden by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo

Rinaldo and Armida in Her Garden

Giovanni Battista Tiepolo·c. 1742–45

Virgin and Child with Saints Dominic and Hyacinth by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo

Virgin and Child with Saints Dominic and Hyacinth

Giovanni Battista Tiepolo·1730–35

More from the Rococo Period

Annunciation to the Shepherds by Jacopo Bassano

Annunciation to the Shepherds

Jacopo Bassano·c. 1710

The Madonna with the Seven Founders of the Servite Order by Agostino Masucci

The Madonna with the Seven Founders of the Servite Order

Agostino Masucci·c. 1728

Theodosius Repulsed from the Church by Saint Ambrose by Alessandro Magnasco

Theodosius Repulsed from the Church by Saint Ambrose

Alessandro Magnasco·c. 1705

Arcadian Landscape with Figures by Alessandro Magnasco

Arcadian Landscape with Figures

Alessandro Magnasco·c. 1700