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Collection Details
With Viancini, Venice; with Agnew, 1968, from whom
bought by the Faringdon Trustees the following year.
Literature
B Nicolson, Burlington Magazine, cx, 1968, p. 638,
fig. 53.
Exhibition Details
Agnew, Baroque and Rococo 17th and 18th Century
Italian Pictures, 1968, No. 19.
Background
Diogenes is shown with the lantern that he is said
to have carried through Athens at mid-day. When asked why he was doing
this, he explained that he was looking for an honest man, and the search
was as futile. Comparison is made in the Agnew exhibition catalogue between
the figure in the present painting and the right-hand figure in the Two
Philosophers by Preti in the Capitoline Museum, Rome (cf Refice Taschetta,
Mattia Preti, 1959, No. 65, repd). The resemblance does not appear to
be sufficiently close to warrant the assumption that the Diogenes is,
like the Two Philosophers, a late work, and indeed it would seem more
like a youthful pastiche of Riberas pictures of Philosophers, if
it is by Preti.
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