Project Details
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Giovanni Battista Piranesi and his Workshop: Two newly identified Albums at Karlsruhe

Subject Area Art History
Term from 2016 to 2022
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 323516160
 
In 2014, an altogether spectacular discovery was made at the Staatliche Kunsthalle Karlsruhe in the South-West of Germany. Two albums containing 297 drawings, previously believed to be the work of the Neo-Classical architect Friedrich Weinbrenner (1766–1826) could be re-attributed and forensically connected with the Roman architect and draughtsman Giovanni Battista Piranesi (1720–78) as well as to some of his workshop collaborators, about whom relatively little had been known prior to this discovery. The evidence in support of an attribution to Piranesi’s workshop context (papers, techniques, watermarks, inscriptions and overall relationships with Piranesi’s published works) and moreover independently of the question of the attribution of individual sheets to Piranesi himself, can now be considered sufficient to securely uphold such a wide-ranging claim, first made in Georg Kabierske’s article of 2015. What we are dealing with can from now on be securely introduced into the literature (and patrimonial register of Baden-Württemberg) as the “Karlsruhe Piranesi Albums”.The Albums are first of all “raw material” for any further investigation. Where do we stand after the initial two project years, after extensive investigations and project-related initiatives such as an international conference at Karlsruhe (April 2018) and two study days at the Avery and Morgan Libraries of New York, thus after having presented the find to nearly all international specialists of who happens to be the foremost if not unchallenged master of eighteenth-century Rome, Giovanni Battista Piranesi? The focus is thus beginning to shift from a first-time, in-depth analysis of the albums and their contents to a much wider investigation in relation to the art-technological and contextual questions raised by the Karlsruhe find, which continues to present itself at the centre of a renewed interest in and reception of Piranesi’s work. The project is likely to produce a lot of new scientific out-put in relation to a field of investigation that nervously anticipates the third centenary of the artist’s birth in 2020. Hence this application for another round of financing, based on the very extensive intermittent finds and results of the first round, focuses on the three closely interrelated principal areas of investigation: a) the contextual (Frank/Maronnie and Kabierske), b) the art technological (Brückle/Krämer) and c) the inventory of the albums at the Prints and Drawings Department of the Kunsthalle Karlsruhe (Morét).
DFG Programme Research Grants
International Connection Switzerland
Cooperation Partner Professor Dr. Christoph Frank
 
 

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