Springtime and Love

Description

This vibrant scene of children playing on a sun-drenched hilltop was part of a series by Francesco Michetti inspired by the people, landscape, festivals and other events in Abruzzo, Italy. Two figures on the right play tambourines, quintessential instruments of southern Italian folk music. With its rounded shape encircled by metal jingles, the tambourine represented for local audiences the sun and its rays spreading light and heat throughout the region. In the foreground a spaniel dog with a large, glassy eye stares out at the viewer like a reproachful commentator on his human companions’ unbridled folly.

Springtime and Love was shown at the Exposition Universelle in Paris in 1878 and in 1893 at the Chicago World’s Fair (also known as the Columbian Exposition). It entered the museum’s permanent collection eight years later.

Provenance

Charles Field Haseltine (died 1915), Philadelphia, by 1883 [lent to Chicago 1883]. Albert A. Munger (died 1898), Chicago, by 1890 [this and the following according to Monroe 1892]; on loan to the Art Institute from 1890; bequeathed to the Art Institute, 1901.

Springtime and Love

Francesco Paolo Michetti

1878

Accession Number

39479

Medium

Oil on canvas

Dimensions

94.6 × 184.3 cm (37 1/2 × 72 3/4 in.)

Classification

painting

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

A. A. Munger Collection