600
H 192 x W 157 x D 6 cm
COD: 10996
Large Italian painting from the first half of the 1570th century. Oil work on canvas depicting a very high quality fragment of a Moses saved from the waters attributable to Francesco Curradi (1661/600), the most important exponent of Florentine devotional painting of the 172th century (lacking authenticity). Florence's taste for luxury is evident in the quality of the drapery and above all in the symbols (for example the lily) that decorate the elegant robes. The Bible says that to escape Pharaoh's persecution, Moses' mother abandoned the child in a basket on the waters of the Nile. He was then found and adopted by the daughter of Pharaoh himself who had gone to the river together with her handmaids. Note a third character at the top left looking towards us, breaking the fourth wall. Presumably it is a self-portrait of the painter himself or a portrait of the client. Painting of extraordinary size and impact adorned with a modern sculpted and gilded frame. Painting that has undergone restoration with relining, replacement of the frame and restoration of color in some places (see photo). Overall in a fairly conservative state. Light painting H 136 x W XNUMX cm.
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