Well, up springs another one. Recently, a painting by the Italian master Sebastiano Ricci, long presumed to be forever lost has turned up in of all places - Texas. The painting titled "The Vision of St. Bruno" is a portrait of a beautiful town in Italy. In my opinion, it's so finely crafted upon first glance it appears to me more like a photograph than a 3 centuries old painting.
The journey from the hands of a European nobleman playboy to a fur trader and finally through generations of family to its current owner is fascinating, but of course cannot be fully known. The last known documentation of the painting was in a 1776 catalog of the collection of Count Francesco Algarotti, a Venetian playboy and art collector. The painting seems to have been passed along through descendants of Charles Rannells, a St. Louis lawyer. The family believes it was originally given to the family in lieu of payment for legal fees.
The painting will go to auction in late November through a Dallas-based auction house called Heritage Galleries, and is expected to garner at least $600K.
The painting will go to auction in late November through a Dallas-based auction house called Heritage Galleries, and is expected to garner at least $600K.
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