Fireworks in a Piazza ca. 1618–23 Guercino (Giovanni Francesco Barbieri) Italian Mahon (1968, no. 191, ) tentatively dated the Museum's drawing to the first phase of Guercino’s career, prior to his Roman sojourn of 1621-23. Mahon noted a similarity between the genre subject matter of the drawing and that of scenes painted by Guercino and assistants in the Casa Pannini, Cento (1617). Mahon suggests the possibility of the architecture reflecting the travels of Guercino's Venetian sojourn of 1618. William Griswold (1991) followed Mahon's dating to the pre-Roman period, noting similar realist


Fireworks in a Piazza ca. 1618–23 Guercino (Giovanni Francesco Barbieri) Italian Mahon (1968, no. 191, ) tentatively dated the Museum's drawing to the first phase of Guercino’s career, prior to his Roman sojourn of 1621-23. Mahon noted a similarity between the genre subject matter of the drawing and that of scenes painted by Guercino and assistants in the Casa Pannini, Cento (1617). Mahon suggests the possibility of the architecture reflecting the travels of Guercino's Venetian sojourn of 1618. William Griswold (1991) followed Mahon's dating to the pre-Roman period, noting similar realistic-looking, but fictitious architecture in the background of paintings such as the Manning Collection Tobias and the Angel (c. 1617). Supporting the dating in the pre-Roman period is also the related drawing of a piazza bonfire showing a similar conical straw construction attributed to the Circle of Guercino (Chatsworth, Devonshire Collection, inv. no. 548: see Jaffe 1994, cat. no. 568).The subject matter is no less elusive. Because Guercino spent much of his life in Bologna, it has been suggested that these fireworks may have had a connection with the election to the papacy of the Bolognese Alessandro Ludovisi (Gregory XV, 1554-1523) in 1621. Although the piazza, with its distinctly Palladian palace to the left and its medieval tower from which fireworks are being shot off, is probably imaginary, the scene has a sense of reality and immediacy (Cazort and Johnston, 1982, no. 51, p. 92) .In regards to the location of the piazza featured in the Museum's drawing, Denis Mahon (1968) commented that the architecture is too monumental to be that of the main piazza at Cento and that it also does not represent the Piazza Maggiore at Bologna. Of great interest, Janos Scholz stated in 1945 that the piazza shown in this drawing is the Piazza delle Erbe at Verona (note in departmental file: J. Bean, December 65 LN). Indeed this drawing portrays the Piazza delle Erbe, though not exactly


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