View full screen - View 1 of Lot 30. Attributed to Giacomo Cassetti (1682–1757), Italy, Vicenza, second quarter of the 18th Century.

Attributed to Giacomo Cassetti (1682–1757), Italy, Vicenza, second quarter of the 18th Century

Estimate

40,000 - 60,000 EUR

Lot Details

Description

Attributed to Giacomo Cassetti (1682–1757)

Italy, Vicenza, second quarter of the 18th Century

A monumental nude figure of Coronis, the lover of Apollo and mother of his son Asclepius, playing a tambourine, a drapery on her legs


Vicenza limestone

The sculpture is shown in a contrapposto pose complementary to the sculpture of Apollo (lot no. 55), with the drapery gathered and knotted around her body.


245 cm, 96½ in. high

This lot requires special handling and shipping services due to its size. Please note that this work is being offered for sale from an offsite location and is not at Replica Shoes ’s Italy premises. Delivery after the auction at the buyer’s expense and the successful purchaser must use Replica Shoes ’s shipping services at it.cx@sothebys.com for collection and delivery.

Sotheby's Florence, Salvatore e Francesco Romano. Antiquari a Firenze. A Century as Antique Dealers at Palazzo Magnani Feroni, 12 October 2009, Lot. 241

This monumental sculpture, carved in pietra di Vicenza, display the stylistic features characteristic of the Venetian sculptor Giacomo Cassetti (1682–1757). His artistic language was shaped by the influence of the Paduan sculptor Antonio Bonazza (1698–1762) and the Venetian master Giovanni Maria Morlaiter (1699–1781).

Cassetti was the pupil and principal collaborator of his father-in-law, Orazio Marinali (Bassano del Grappa, 1643 – Vicenza, 1720), whose daughter he married in 1706. In 1742 he signed the celebrated group of San Giorgio on the altar of the parish church of Castel Tesino, near Trento, with the inscription: IACOBUS CASSETTI/MARINALI (fig. 55, p. 399).

In 1715 he was active on the garden sculptures in the park of Villa Trissino-Marzotto.

Particularly striking is the resemblance between the head of Coronis and that of the Mansuetudo in the church of Santa Maria in Araceli, Vicenza. Likewise, the contrapposto stance of our figure recalls both the Justice at Santo Stefano in Vicenza and the Minerva at Palazzo Fietta-Serena in Asolo (De Grassi 2002, figs. 47, 51, 71; pp. 396, 393, 406).

The Apollo Citaredo also finds close parallels in the statues of the god at Villa Cardellina in Montecchio Maggiore and at Palazzo Fietta-Serena in Asolo (figs. 69–70, p. 405).

We thank Dr. Maichol Clemente, who has attributed this lot to Giacomo Cassetti.


The pendant sculpture depicting Apollo was sold at Replica Shoes 's Milan, 25 September 2025, lot. 55.


Related Literature:

Massimo De Grassi, Giacomo Cassetti e l'eredità dei Marinali, La Scultura Veneta del Seicento e del Settecento, Venice, 2002, p. 337.