Allegory of Fortune
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| Allegory of Fortune | |
|---|---|
| Artist | Salvator Rosa |
| Year | c. 1658–1659 |
| Medium | Oil painting on canvas |
| Dimensions | 200.7 cm × 133 cm (79.0 in × 52 in) |
| Location | J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles |
Allegory of Fortune, sometimes also named La Fortuna, is an oil painting on canvas featuring the Roman goddess of fortune, Fortuna, that was created c. 1658 or 1659 by the Italian baroque painter Salvator Rosa. The painting caused uproar when first exhibited publicly and almost got the painter jailed and excommunicated. Bearing initials but undated, it measures 200.7 by 133 centimetres (79.0 by 52.4 in). Rosa was known for his landscape paintings, but also worked in the sphere of mythology, witchcraft, portraits, and satire.[1] Since 1978 it has been in the J. Paul Getty Museum in Brentwood, Los Angeles.
The painting was made at much the same time as Rosa penned Babilonia, a satirical condemnation of the papal court.[2][a] According to art critic Brian Sewell, the target of the satirical painting could not be misinterpreted.[2] Rosa's friends warned him after viewing it privately,[4] that the painting should not be displayed openly as it was a satirical attack on Pope Alexander VII's patronage.[5] In 1659, the painting was exhibited at the Pantheon, Rome, which almost resulted in Rosa being jailed and excommunicated. Only the intervention of the pope's brother, Don Marco Chigi, saved him from this humiliation.[4]
Eventually, Rosa was convinced of the need to offer an explanation of the picture; he did this under the rubric of Manifesto and, according to art writer James Elmes, "proved that his hogs were not churchmen, his mules pretending pedants, his asses Roman nobles, and his birds and beasts of prey, the reigning despots of Italy."[6]
An earlier painting of Fortune was undertaken by Rosa during the 1640s.[7]
