Exhibition
Belgioso (Pavia), Castello di Belgioioso, May 13-July 16, Ariccia (Roma), Palazzo Chigi, September 16 -November 26, I Piaceri della Vita in Campagna nell’Arte dal XVI al XVIII secolo, exh. cat., 2000; Cortina d’Ampezzo (BL), Ciasa de ra Regoles, Francesco Foschi, 2003; Sestriere (TO), Italy, Neve sulla Neve. Paesaggi innevati del XVIII sec., February 2005; Shanghai, From Light to Enlightenment, Shanghai Art Museum, China, 12 -17 November 2005.

Literature
P. Zampetti, Pittura nelle Marche. Vol. 4, Dal Barocco all’Età Moderna, Florence, 1991, p. 325, ill.; M. Vinci, Francesco Foschi, Ancona, 1710 – Rome, 1780, Monte Carlo, 2002, p. 30, ill.; M. Vinci-Corsini in Francesco Foschi, exh. cat., Milan 2002, ed. Skira, p. 186, n. 118, color ill. pp.124-125; From Light to Enlightenment, exh. cat., Shanghai Art Museum, 2005, N 23, pp. 92-93, 146.

One of Foschi’s masterpieces, this painting is of his mature period. The setting for this scene is basically the same as that in Preparing for a Journey (Private Collection), which is the preparatory work for this painting. Foschi has made minor changes in the arrangement of the travelers and provided himself a challenge by adding a farm hand with two oxen and three sheep watering at the edge of the icy stream.

A family travels on foot in the immediate foreground; the father carries his son on his back. They are identical to the mother and father shown in The Family Makes a Trip (Private Collection). Further along the road a calèche has stopped, presumably for refreshments at the roadside hut, tucked under the side of the mountain. Two men, one mounted, stand in front of the shelter, drinking what is probably vino cotto.

An old shepherd with a bagpipe is sitting on a stool and playing in the shelter. He is playing the cornamusa. It is different from another type of bagpipe used in the Marches, the zampogna, in that the two pipes are uneven. They were usually made by the pastor with the skin of a sheep. At the table, two children fight over food, while two women stand ready to serve more wine. At the far right in the shelter there is a dog doing his business. This is a typical touch of sarcasm by Foschi.

The painting is filled with a variety of movement. Separate dramas take place at the river’s edge, under the shelter, between the traveling couple and by the calèche.

The contrast between the isolation of the travelers and the warmth of the sheltered resting stop captures the spirit of a long journey, punctuated only occasionally by welcome respites like this one. All these lives will intersect for a moment at this bend in the road, and then continue on their independent ways. It is Foschi’s skill to catch this momentary intersection of lives separately, and as integral parts of a larger whole.


Francesco Foschi

The Calèche in Front of the Shepherd’s Hut

Artist
Francesco Foschi
( Ancona, 1710 – Rome, 1780 )

Details
Oil on canvas 124×175 cm

Provenance
Private Collection USA, 1990