Friday, May 22, 2026
VeriArtem.comNewsJohann Baptist Lampi the Elder and the Younger at the Belvedere
spot_img
Johann Baptist Lampi Venus Belvedere

Johann Baptist Lampi the Elder and the Younger at the Belvedere

On view at the Belvedere from 13 May to 11 October 2026, “Overpainted and Uncovered” studies how interventions altered the meaning of works by Johann Baptist Lampi the Elder and the Younger

Source: Belvedere · Image: Johann Baptist Lampi the Younger, Sleeping Venus with Cupid in Front of a Mirror, 1826 (condition after the overpainting was removed, 2024)

What do a Neoclassical family portrait and a Biedermeier painting of Venus have in common? Both the portrait of Caroline and Viktor von Tomatis by Johann Baptist Lampi the Elder and the painting Sleeping Venus in Front of a Mirror with Cupid by his eponymous son were significantly overpainted. This IN-SIGHT exhibition traces how these major interventions altered the meaning of both works.

During his time in Warsaw in 1788/89, Johann Baptist Lampi the Elder painted several portraits of the Tomatis family. Milanese dancer Catarina, née Filipazzi, had moved to Warsaw with entrepreneur Carlo Tomatis in 1765. One of the three portraits of the fa mily by Lampi shows two of their children, Caroline and Viktor, standing either side of a bust. X -ray and infrared imaging from 2016 revealed this bust to be an overpainting: hidden beneath the layers of paint is a portrait of their mother, Catarina, embra cing her children. This exhibition tells the story of the Tomatis family based on this work, further portraits, and archival material.

Cupid emerged, concealed beneath a black surface. By erasing the god of love, the mythological content of this work had faded into the background. This helps explain why the painting was later interpreted as a portrait of Emilie Victoria Kraus, one of Napo leon’s lovers, in two twentieth -century novels set in Salzburg. It was precisely this false interpretation that paved the way to the painting’s popularity —reaching even as far as Paraguay. Now, for the first time since the revealing of Cupid in 2024, the p ainting will be shown to the public under its original title.

This exhibition uncovers the layers of meaning contained within two paintings, which had been hidden by overpainting. It shows that the meaning of artworks can be significantly altered once they leave the artist’s studio: A family portrait expressing a mot her’s love for her children was transformed into a memorial, an idealized Venus became the portrait of a local Salzburg celebrity.

Latest

Monet and Venice at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco

Monet and Venice at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco On view in San Francisco from March 21 to July 26, 2026, the exhibition...

Raphael: Sublime Poetry at the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Raphael: Sublime Poetry at the Metropolitan Museum of Art “Raphael: Sublime Poetry”, on view March 29 to June 28, 2026, at The Metropolitan Museum of...

Stubbs: Portrait of a Horse at the National Gallery

Stubbs: Portrait of a Horse at the National Gallery From 12 March to 31 May 2026, the National Gallery presents a new exhibition devoted to...

Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller: “True to Nature” at the Belvedere

Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller: “True to Nature” at the Belvedere From 27 February to 14 June 2026, the Lower Belvedere presents the exhibition “Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller:...

The Courtauld Gallery presents “Seurat and the Sea”

The Courtauld Gallery presents “Seurat and the Sea” From 13 February to 17 May 2026, the Courtauld Gallery presents the exhibition “Seurat and the Sea” Source:...
spot_img

Sponsored Artwork for SaleVeriArtem.com
VeriArtem ART & ANTIQUE MARKETPLACE, FAIR ART TRADE, NO COMMISSION ON SALE

Mars Sculpture

Mars, The god of war, is one of the most prominent and worshipped gods. In early Roman history he was a god of spring, growth in nature, and fertility, and the protector of cattle.
£2,200.00

An Eruption of Vesuvius

Johan Christian Claussen Dahl, often known as J. C. Dahl or I. C. Dahl, was a Danish-Norwegian artist who is considered the first great romantic painter in Norway, the founder of the "golden age" of Norwegian painting, and, by some, one of the greatest European artists of all time.
£8,500.00

After the Ball

The portrait painter devoted himself to the portrait of a lady, and he understood the materiality of elegant dresses. He was precise and painted them with great skill, such as the present work.
£950.00