Monsignor de Canillac’s macchina for the Festa in Piazza Farnese to Honour the Marriage of the Dauphin of France and the Infanta of Spain in 1745

David Marshall

Abstract


Giovanni Paolo Panini’s unfinished Festa in Piazza Farnese to Honour the Marriage of the Dauphin of France with the Infanta of Spain, recently exhibited at the Getty Museum in the exhibition Eyewitness Views: Making History in Eighteenth-Century Europe, was made for the commissioner of the festa, Monsignor de Canillac. It shows the macchina as executed, which differed in a number of ways from the print by Louis-Joseph Le Lorrain, a pensionnaire at the French Academy in Rome, which was published in advance of its construction. Because the festa was delayed, the first macchina of the festival of the Chinea for Prince Colonna, which took place in the same piazza, was scrapped and replaced by one that re-used the armature of Canillac’s macchina. It is possible to infer the approximate form of this armature, part of which is visible in the painting (but not the print) as a tree-trunk. This raises the question of the nature of the second Chinea macchine, which were the main feature of the second day of the festival: after 1751 they re-used the armature of the first macchina, but prior to this many, if not all, may have been paintings rather than architectural structures.

The second Chinea macchina of 1745, designed by Le Lorrain, along with his designs in the following years, have long been considered to be radical new statements of a proto-neoclassicsm inspired by Piranesi. Both the director of the French Academy, Jean-François de Troy, and Panini’s fellow painter Giuseppe Ghezzi were critical of the Canillac macchina and of Panini, who was in part responsible for its design, although his son Giuseppe was the architect in charge of construction. This critical hostility can be traced to Panini’s changing relationship with the French Academy and their differing conceptions of ephemeral architectural design. Panini conceived of festival designs unarchitectonically and pictorially, whereas the French pensionnaires saw them as opportunities to experiment with innovative architectural design that would eventually lead to the betterment of French architecture. 


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DOI: https://doi.org/10.14633/AHR070

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Copyright (c) 2018 David Marshall

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ArcHistoR è una rivista open access e peer reviewed (double blind), di Storia dell’architettura e Restauro, pubblicata dall’Università Mediterranea di Reggio Calabria. La rivista ha cadenza semestrale. È una rivista di Classe A (ANVUR) per l’Area 08 - Ingegneria civile ed Architettura, settori C1, D1, E1, E2, F1.

Comitato scientifico internazionale

Maria Dolores Antigüedad del Castillo-Olivares (Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia de España), Monica Butzek (Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz), Jean-François Cabestan (Université Paris 1 - Panthéon Sorbonne), Alicia Cámara Muñoz (Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia de España), David Friedman (Massachussets Institute of Technology), Alexandre Gady (Université Paris-IV-Sorbonne), Jörg Garms (Universität Wien), Miles Glenndinning (Scottish Centre for Conservation Studies, University of Edinburgh), Mark Wilson Jones (University of Bath), Loughlin Kealy (University College Dublin), Paulo Lourenço (Department of Civil Engineering, University of Minho), David Marshall (University of Melbourne), Werner Oechslin (ETH, Zurich, Stiftung Bibliothek Werner Oechslin, Einsiedeln), José Luis Sancho (Dirección de Conservación de Bienes Histórico-Artísticos, Palacio Real, Madrid), Dmitrij O. Švidkovskij (Moscow Architectural Institute, MARCHI)

Comitato direttivo

Tommaso Manfredi (direttore responsabile), Giuseppina Scamardì (direttore editoriale), Bruno Mussari, Annunziata Maria Oteri, Francesca Passalacqua, Nino Sulfaro

 

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Laboratorio CROSS. Storia dell'architettura e Restauro

    

      

 ISSN 2384-8898

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic License.