Tiepolo’s first commission away from Venice was in 1730-31, for the frescoes on five ceilings for Palazzo Archinto in Milan. This sketch was made in preparation for the frescoes of one of the ceilings. Commissioned by Carlo Archinto, the elaborate fresco program was probably meant to celebrate the marriage of Archinto’s firstborn son, Filippo, to Giulia Borromeo.
Tragically, during World War II, on the night of August 13, 1943, Palazzo Archinto was bombed, and save for a small fragment the frescoes were completely destroyed. Together with some black-and-white photographs, small sketches like this are the only surviving evidence of Tiepolo’s frescoes in the palace.
Carlo Archinto’s erudition is reflected in the iconography of his palace’s ceilings, which can be challenging to interpret. In Greek mythology, the Aethiopian princess Andromeda was sacrificed to a marine monster because her mother, Cassiopea, had claimed her daughter was more beautiful than the Nereids, Neptune’s daughters. Here, soaring through the clouds on his winged horse, Pegasus, the hero Perseus has just saved Andromeda, unchaining her from the rocks, as the shackles and chains at her ankles tell us. On the left, the Nereids are still crying for the death of the sea monster, killed by Perseus in order to free Andromeda. Jupiter observes the scene from the sky, as Andromeda’s mother pleads for mercy.
Most of the mythological figures in this scene have the names of stars or constellations. If you look closely, you can see small stars superimposed on some of the figures. A fictive starry sky would have been particularly appropriate for the decoration of a ceiling.
Perseus and Andromeda
The painting is a study for one of Tiepolo’s four ceiling frescoes in the Palazzo Archinto, Milan, which was destroyed by bombing in 1943. A fresco in the main salon, representing an Allegory of the Arts, bore the date 1731.
According to legend, Cassiopeia, Queen of Ethiopia, had angered the Nereids by boasting that she and her daughter Andromeda were as beautiful as they. To punish her presumption, Neptune sent flood waters and a sea-monster to ravage the land. Learning from an oracle that his daughter must be sacrificed to the monster in order to save his people, King Cepheus had Andromeda chained to a rock by the sea. The hero Perseus saw her and, moved by her beauty, rescued Andromeda, sweeping her skyward on his winged horse, Pegasus. The luminous heavens, illusionistically conceived to be seen from below, open to reveal Minerva and Jupiter seated on gold-tinged clouds.
Source: Art in The Frick Collection: Paintings, Sculpture, Decorative Arts, New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1996
Carl Sedelmeyer (1837–1925), Vienna; his sale, Vienna, December 20–21, 1872 (lot 158); Leon Gauchez (1825–1907); his sale (under the fictive name "Marquis de la Rochebousseau"), Paris, May 5–8, 1873 (lot 244); M.A. Parissot; sale, Hôtel Drouot, Paris, November 20–22, 1911 (lot 68); Trotti; purchased by Knoedler, December 1911; Purchased by Henry Clay Frick (1849–1919), May 1916; his bequest to the Frick Collection, New York, 1919.