Details
ALESSANDRO TURCHI (VERONA 1578-1649 ROME)
Lot and his Daughters
oil on canvas, unframed
4414 x 5634 in. (112.3 x 144.1 cm.)
Provenance
Palazzo Gherardini, San Fermetto, by 1718.
Palazzo Gherardini, San Pietro in Monastero, by 1755.
Aron Vitta Lattis, Milan, by 1813.
General Teodoro Lechi, Brescia (1778-1866), acquired 15 June 1819, by whom sold on 9 February 1854 to,
Charles Henfrey (1818-1891).
Mr René Moise [Renatus Moses] Bloch and Mrs Suzanne Bloch neé Haas (René and Suzanne Bloch), Strasbourg, Alsace, as 'attributed to Nicolas Poussin (1594-1665)';
Looted by the Nazis from the above as part of the “M-Aktion” (Möbel-Aktion) in Poitiers, Occupied France, most likely between February-August 1944, as 'attributed to Poussin'.
Anonymous sale; Christie’s Monaco, 3 December 1988, lot 30, as 'attributed to Alessandro Turchi (1578-1649)' (unsold).
Private collection, Italy, acquired in 1999.
Art Market, Italy, 2017.
Seized from the above by the Carabinieri and restituted to the heirs of René and Suzanne Bloch.

Please note that the present work is being offered for sale pursuant to a settlement agreement between a private party and the heirs of René and Suzanne Bloch. The settlement agreement resolves the dispute over ownership of the work and title will pass to the successful bidder.
Literature
B. Dal Pozzo, Le Vite dePittori, degli Scultori, et Architetti Veronesi, Verona, 1718, p. 285.
C.-N. Cochin, Voyage dItalie, ou recueil de notes sur les ouvrages de peinture et de sculpture, quon voit dans les principales villes dItalie, Paris, 1758, pp. 206-7.
P.-A. Guys, Voyage littéraire de la Grèce, ou Lettres sur les Grecs, anciens et modernes, avec un parallèle de leurs urs, II, Paris, 1776, p. 503.
Elenco della quadreria del signor Conte Teodoro Lechi, Brescia, 1824, p. 28, no. 53.
Descrizione dei dipinti raccolti dal conte Teodoro Lechi nella sua casa di Brescia, Milan, 1837, p. 24, no. 62.
F. Lechi, I quadri delle Collezioni Lechi in Brescia. Storia e documenti, Florence, 1968, p. 197, no. 176.
E. Schleier, ‘Drawings by Alessandro Turchi’, Master Drawings, IX, 2, 1971, p. 147.
R. Pallucchini, La pittura venziana del Seicento, Milan, 1981, p. 118.
G. Romano (ed.), Pittura italiana del 600 e del 700, Milan, 1990, p. 247.
S. Marinelli, P. Marini and H. Sueur (eds.), Disegni Veronesi al Louvre 1500-1630, exhibition catalogue, Milan, 1994, p. 206.
G. Baldissin Molli, ‘L’iconografia di san Giacinto in due dipinti veronesi e un’aggiunta all’Orbetto’, Arte Cristiana, XXXVI, no. 767, 1995, pp. 123-4.
M. Repetto Contaldo and G. Sala, La chiesa di San Martino di Albisano, Verona, 1999, p. 42.
E.M. Guzzo, ‘Per la storia del collezionismo a Verona. Nuovi documenti sulle quadrerie India, Giusti, Muselli, Canossa e Gherardini’, Studi Storici Luigi Simeoni, LIV, 2004, p. 421
A. Piai, ‘”Quanto si disegna, si dipinge ancora”. Disegnatori tra Verona, Venezia e Roma nel primo Seicento’, Verona Illustrata, no. 23, 2010, p. 61.
D. Dossi, ‘Gaspare Gherardini, particolar Padrone, e Protettore di Alessandro Turchi’, Storia dellArte, no. 139, 2014, p. 39.
L. Canella, La collezione di Charles Henfrey (1818-1891), MA thesis, Università degli Studi di Milano, 2018-19, pp. 66 and 106-9.
D. Scaglietti Kelescian, Alessandro Turchi detto lOrbetto 1578-1649, Verona, 2019, pp. 282-3, no. 161.
Exhibited
Verona, Museo di Castelvecchio, Alessandro Turchi detto l'Orbetto (1578-1649), 21 September-21 December 1999, no. 49.
Special notice
This lot has been imported from outside of the UK for sale and placed under the Temporary Admission regime. Import VAT is payable at 5% on the hammer price. VAT at 20% will be added to the buyer’s premium but will not be shown separately on our invoice.
Please note this lot is the property of a consumer. See H1 of the Conditions of Sale.
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Lot Essay

Alessandro Turchi was born in Verona, where he trained in the studio of Felice Brusasorci. Influenced in his early career by the compositions of Veronese, by 1615 Turchi was working in Rome, alongside Giovanni Lanfranco and Carlo Saraceni, on the Sala Regia in the Palazzo del Quirinale. Turchi's success in the Quirinale led to commissions from, among others, Caravaggio's ambitious patron, Cardinal Scipione Borghese. By 1619 he was well established in Rome's artistic community, joining the Accademia di San Luca and serving as its Principe after Pietro da Cortona in 1637. The nickname ‘Orbetto’ (the diminutive of orbo, ‘blind man’) was often used from the second half of the 1600s to refer to the artist, and probably assigned to him after his death. It was likely derived from his assistance to his father, who according to the Verona tax census of 1595 was referred to as ‘cecus mendicans olim spatarius’ (‘blind, dependent on alms, formerly sword-maker’).

In addition to religious works, Turchi painted numerous mythological subjects throughout his career for both Italian and foreign patrons. By 1640 the painter's success in this was such that he caught the eye of Phélypeaux de La Vrillière, an influential Frenchman in Rome who also commissioned pictures from Pietro da Cortona and Guercino, and for whom Turchi painted The Death of Antony and Cleopatra (Paris, Musée du Louvre). This staging of Lot and his Daughters was once given to Poussin, a reflection of its classicising tendencies and crisp execution, and is dated by Daniela Scaglietti Kelescian, to whom we are grateful for her assistance, to the later 1630s, to one of the finest moments of his illustrious career. The provenance of the picture saw it pass through the important Gherardini family in Verona, to the Italian general Teodoro Lechi and to the English collector Charles Henfrey, who amassed a fine collection at his home, Villa Clara-Henfrey, in Baveno.

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