Please Note: Tickets are required for this entry to this exhibition. General Admission $20; Wellesley College alumnae $12. Gratis entry for  all students, Wellesley College faculty and staff, Friends of Art members, and Durant Society members.

 

The Medici’s Painter: Carlo Dolci and 17th-Century Florence is the first exhibition in America devoted to the luminous and meticulously rendered paintings and drawings of Italian artist Carlo Dolci (1616–1687). It provides an unprecedented opportunity to study the life and oeuvre of 17th-century Florence’s most important painter, whose reverence for detail, brilliant palette, and seemingly enameled surfaces earned the favor of patronage by the powerful Medici family.

 

The Davis Museum’s most ambitious Old Master project to date, The Medici’s Painter includes over fifty autograph works—pictures of the highest pictorial, technical, and spiritual qualities—through exceptional loans from the world’s major museums and rarely seen works from private collections in the U.S. and abroad, including the Uffizi Gallery and Palazzo Pitti in Florence, the Louvre Museum in Paris, The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles, and the Museum of Fine Arts Houston, among others.

 

The Medici’s Painter is curated by Eve Straussman-Pflanzer, Head of the European Art Department & Elizabeth and Allan Shelden Curator of European Paintings at the Detroit Institute of Arts, with consulting curator Francesca Baldassari. Straussman-Pflanzer was previously the Assistant Director of Curatorial Affairs and Senior Curator of Collections at the Davis Museum.

 

“The exhibition will consider Dolci’s art in depth as well as consider art as a critical diplomatic, political, and cultural tool from the early modern period to the present,” said Straussman-Pflanzer. “It provides the first opportunity in the United States to study the life and oeuvre of the most important artist in 17 th -century Florence.”

 

Best known for his half-length and single-figure devotional pictures, Dolci was also a gifted painter of altarpieces and portraits as well as a highly accomplished draughtsman. He created his first works of art in the mid-1620s, after entering the studio of the Florentine painter Jacopo Vignali (1592–1664) in 1625. Among his first patrons were members of the Medici family and foreign nobility, who immediately recognized his reverence for detail, brilliant palette, and seemingly enameled surfaces.

This exhibition moves beyond the notion of Dolci as a sentimental painter or an exclusively devotional one, and returns to an appreciation of the aesthetic merits, naturalistic under- pinnings, and cultural context of the artist’s work. Exhibiting Dolci’s oeuvre chronologically with attention to autograph works by the artist, the exhibition will exceed longstanding prejudices by presenting the artist’s exquisite surfaces and breathtaking palette alongside preparatory drawings. Such juxtaposition will reveal the sheer technical virtuosity of the artist as well as the naturalistic vein that forms the foundation of his entire legacy.

 

A fully illustrated catalogue, published by the Davis Museum at Wellesley College and distributed by Yale University Press, accompanies the exhibition. Edited by Dr. Straussman- Pflanzer, the volume features essays by leading early modern scholars: Francesca Baldassari, Edward Goldberg, Lisa Goldenberg Stoppato, Scott Nethersole, and Eve Straussman-Pflanzer. The price for the catalogue is $35.

 

Generously supported by Wellesley College Friends of Art at the Davis Museum, Davis World Cultures Fund, E. Franklin Robbins Art Museum Fund, National Endowment for the Arts, the National Endowment for the Arts Museum Program Fund, Anonymous '70 Endowed Davis Museum Program Fund, The Judith Blough Wentz '57 Museum Programs Fund, The Samuel H. Kress Foundation, The Robert Lehman Foundation, Inc., and the Office of the Provost and Dean of Wellesley College. Grants were received from the National Endowment for the arts, The Samuel H. Kress Foundation, and The Robert Lehman Foundation, Inc.

 

Purchase Dolci Tickets Here

 

THE MEDICI’S PAINTER: CARLO DOLCI AND 17TH-CENTURY FLORENCE will be traveling to the NASHER Museum of Art at Duke University and will be on view from AUGUST 24, 2017 - JANUARY 14, 2018

 

Media Coverage Spring 2017

The Swellesley Report, December 16

Davis Museum bringing ambitious Carlo Dolci exhibit to Wellesley

Harvard magazine, January/February issue
Extracurriculars (pages 16A-B)

Ouest France, January 20, 2017
Le moine guérisseur de Carlo Dolci part aux États-Unis

The Boston Globe, January 26, 2017
Winter Arts guide 2017: Top 10 upcoming art events

Fine Art Connoisseur, February 9, 2017
The Medici’s Painter

 

Artdaily.org, February 10, 2017
The Davis Museum presents first U.S. retrospective of the works of Carlo Dolci

 

Art History News, Monday, February 13, 2017
The Medici’s Painter: Carlo Dolci and 17th-Century Florence

 

The Boston Globe, February 22
Art Review: Baroque master Carlo Dolci gets his first US retrospective

 

Boston Globe, Thursday, February 23
The Weekender: Giant leaps, political laughs, and Oscars drama

 

We the Italians, February 24, 2017
Baroque master Carlo Dolci gets his first US retrospective

 

The Swellesley Report, February 24
Wellesley Davis museum presents a jewel of an exhibit

 

MetroWest Daily News, March 5
ON EXHIBIT: Florentine painter Carlo Dolci at Wellesley’s Davis Museum

 

Also appeared in the Patriot Ledger, the Burlington Union, The Milford Daily News, the Harwich Oracle, the Hanover Mariner, Wicked Local Brewster)

WBUR’s The ARTery, March 10
Rediscovering Baroque Master Carlo Dolci, Whose Paintings Bring Emotions Right To The Surface

 

Hyperallergic
The Sweet Life: Carlo Dolci at the Davis Museum, Wellesley
Friday, March 17, 2017