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Overview
Francesco Londonio (1723–1783) was an Italian painter, engraver and scenographer, active mainly in Milan and working in a late-Baroque or Rococo style which was always pervaded by realism. Londonio trained as a painter under Ferdinando Porta and Giovanni Battista Sassi and studied engraving with Benigno Bossi in Milan. He is best known for his paintings and endearing etchings of rustic and pastoral landscapes and subjects, with both animals and peasants playing a dominant role over the landscape. This focus on genre themes was popular among the wealthy patrons of the time, especially in Northern Italy.
Londonio is also known for his scenography. An example, of this poorly conserved art form that still exists is a nativity scene using cut wooden shapes, for the church of San Marco in Milan. The effect is a cheaper version of the naturalistic Sacri Monti scenes, which involved painted stucco statuary. The work at San Marco prompted Empress Maria Theresa of Austria to appoint Londonio as art designer for La Scala, the legendary Milanese opera house.
Londonio spent his life in Milan and died there in 1783. Despite his artistic prowess, relatively little has been published about him. Art historian Roberta J. Olson admires Londonio’s ‘sympathetic portrayal of animals and their co-existence with human beings in serenely simple compositions which are at the same time realistic, reflecting his position on the cusp of the change resulting from the Enlightenment’.
This etching is one of Londonio's most dramatic; it is rich in chiaroscuro (light and shade) effects, surely evocative of Caravaggio, who was then still very much out of fashion. It almost certainly represents a rarer reworking of the better-known print Cow and calf outdoors, in a more normal pastoral setting. Here Londonio moves them to just outside the darkened stable, whose dark arch and chain attached to the wall create a more sinister, prison-like effect. The calf appears to look faintly anxiously towards its massive, monumental mother.
Sources:
Roberta J. Olson, ‘Review: Francesco Londonio’, Print Quarterly, 13, 1 (1996), pp. 73-76.
Wikipedia, ‘Francesco Londonio', https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francesco_Londonio
Dr Mark Stocker Curator, Historical International Art April 2019