
Giulio Cesare Procaccini
Provenance
Exhibitions
El Arte en la Passion de Nuestro Señor, exhibition, Barcelona 1945, no. 13;
Genua Tempu Fà, exhibition in Monaco , Maison d’ Art, 1997;
Procaccini in America, exhibition, New York, Hall & Knight Ltd, 2002;
Le Meraviglie dell’Arte, Important Old Master Paintings, exhibition catalogue, Maison d’Art, Monte-Carlo, 2005.
Literature
M. Trens, El Arte en la Passion de Nuestro Señor, exh. cat., Barcelona 1945, no. 13;
A. Pérez Sánchez, Pintura Italiana del Siglo XVII en España, Madrid 1965, p. 364;
C.Thompson & H. Brigstocke, Shorter Catalogue.National Gallery of Scotland, Edinburgh 1970, pp. 70-71; N.Ward Neilson, “An altarpiece by Giulio Cesare Procaccini and some further remarks”, Arte Lombarda, no. 37, 1972, pp. 22-25 fig. 1;
M. Valsecchi, in Il Seicento Lombardo, exh. cat. by G. Bora, M. Valsecchi, Milan, Palazzo Reale and Pinacoteca Ambrosiana, 1973, II p. 42, no. 78; H. Brigstocke, “Preview to the Lombard exhibition of 17th century art in Italy, an opportunity to study G. C. Procaccini’s chronology”, Connoisseur, 1973, p. 15; P. Cannon-Brookes, Lombard Paintings 1595-1630. The Age of Federico Borromeo, exh. cat., Birmingham, City Museum Art Gallery, 1974, p. 187; H. Brigstocke, ”Il Seicento Lombardo” (review), The Burlington Magazine, vol. C X V, no. 847, 1973, p.691;
H. Brigstocke, Italian and Spanish Paintings in the National Gallery of Scotland, Edinburgh 1978, p. 108;idem, revised ed. 1993, p. 125 note ii; M. Rosci, Giulio Cesare Procaccini, Soncino 1993, pp. 42, 110; H. Brigstocke, in T. Zennaro ed., Genua Tempu Fà, exh. cat., Monaco, Maison d’ Art, 1997, pp. 7-13, no. 2; H. Brigstocke, in N. H. J. Hall, ed., Procaccini in America, exh. cat., Hall & Knight Ltd, New York 2002, pp. 90-93, no. 8, and under no. 9, pp. 94-97;
Hugh Brigstocke,Le Meraviglie dell’Arte, Important Old Master Paintings, exhibition catalogue, Maison d’Art, Monte-Carlo, 2005, n.10, pp. 55 – 60, color ill p.57.
Procaccini’s Capture of Christ is matched in his own oeuvre only by a small distinctive group of pictures of similar dimensions, showing further scenes from Christ’s Passion: The Flagellation in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; a Mocking of Christ in Sheffield; The Raising of the Cross in the National Gallery of Scotland, Edinburgh; a Deposition, unusually with Christ still nailed to the Cross, in London (Matthiesen Gallery); possibly a lost Pietà, published by Fernanda Wittgens ; and a signed Agony in the Garden, formerly in the collection made in the nineteenth century by the Vizcondes de Roda, Spain . It is not entirely impossible that all or some of these pictures originally formed part of a Passion cycle in some religious institution, in Italy or maybe Spain, where they escaped the attention of guide book writers. However no such cycle is documented, nor do any of the pictures under discussion have any early provenance to support such a hypothesis.
On the other hand a surprisingly large number of pictures by Procaccini related to The Passion turn up within a short space of time in English sales and exhibitions in the nineteenth century, a time when the Milanese artist was not a household name, which might suggest that they were imported together as a related group in the aftermath of the Napoleonic wars. Importations at this time from Genoa by the British art trade are surprisingly well documented and there are no references to such Procaccini paintings there which might instead suggest a Spanish source, or even a route via France. In 1830 a Crucifixion by G. C. Procaccini was recorded in the Literary Gazette as in the possession of Mr. Young of Craigs Court, and it is not inconceivable that this is an early reference to the Edinburgh picture. In 1836 a Deposition from the Cross was exhibited at Davidson’s Pall Mall Gallery in London and was also described in the Literary Gazette; and what appears to have been the same picture was then exhibited at Manchester Art Treasures Exhibition 1857 as from the Abraham Darby collection. George Scharf, who in the same year recorded its composition and its dimensions (84 1/2 x 58 in.), attributed it Camillo Procaccini (Sketchbook 45, National Portrait Gallery, London); but at the Darby sale, it reappeared under an attribution Giulio Cesare Procaccini and was paired with a picture of Christ led to Calvary (lot 99). The Christ led to Calvary cannot now be identified, unless it was in fact our picture of the Capture of Christ; there is a superficial similarity in these two subjects with Christ standing in a hostile crowd, and when Neilson published the present picture in 1972 it was described as The Way to Calvary. The Deposition can be firmly recognized from Scharf’s sketch as a Pietà which much later reappeared in a private collection, Milan, in 1933 when it was published by Wittgens. This might also be the Deposition by Procaccini which had been bought in at Nathaniel Strode sale at Camden Place. Meanwhile in 1853 a Mocking of Christ of Large Size by G.C. Procaccini is recorded with Charles O’Neill, a London picture dealer; this could well be the picture of this subject which has been in Sheffield since 1912. There is no specific reference during this period to a Capture of Christ; and the earliest firm provenance for the present picture dates from 1937 when it was with Tomás Harris, the London dealer.