VIENNA.- The seventeenth Point of View showcases a new discovery from the worlds largest collection of works by the Bassano dynasty of painters, which is in the Picture Gallery of the
Kunsthistorisches Museum. Moses Striking the Rock by Jacopo da Ponte, called Bassano, was long regarded as the work of one of his followers and thus banished to the depot and hidden from both the general public and experts for five decades. However, the on-going research project analysing the Picture Gallerys Bassano holdings was able to identify the elegant painting as an important work by Jacopo (c. 1570-1575).
Jacopos skilful colour arrangement leads our gaze into the centre of the composition where the miracle has just taken place. Celebrated by seventeenth-century Venetian art critics for his virtuoso sense of colour, the artist chose the rolling countryside of the Alpine foothills north of Venice as the setting for the popular biblical story, with Monte Grappas distinctive peak clearly visible in the distance. Note the exquisite brushwork and brilliant handling; the apparently quick and sketchy execution bears witness to Jacopos exceptional technical skills and amazing chromatic sensibilities - with only a few brushstrokes he suggests a profile, sketches a face, evokes the body of an animal, revelling in the suggestive play of light and shadows and the faithful rendering of the textures of the different surfaces. A comprehensive scientific examination has revealed that Jacopo planned the composition in advance, defining the spatial arrangement of the scene in an underdrawing sketched onto the canvas in quick brushstrokes. Colour adds structure to the composition: following the painterly traditions of Venice, Bassano employs brilliant pigments to accent the main protagonists, giving noble lake pigments a central role in der foreground.