The Singing of a Folk Song (Il canto di uno stornello)
| Support Type: | Canvas |
| Paint Type: | Oil Paint |
| Current Location: | The Gallery of Modern Art of Palazzo Pitti, Florence, Italy |
| Location History: | Painted in 1867 in the serene Piagentina countryside, "Il canto di uno stornello" traveled through exhibitions in Florence, Genoa, and Parma. It eventually entered the private collection of Giulio Marchi. Honouring his uncle’s final testamentary wishes, Cesare Marchi later donated the masterpiece to Florence’s Galleria d’Arte Moderna inside Palazzo Pitti, where it remains on permanent display today. |
Silvestro Lega’s "Il canto di uno stornello" is the depiction of quiet, domestic serenity, of music frozen in time. In the composition, a massive open window serves as a deliberate picture-within-a-picture, cutting a geometric rectangle out of the dim interior, contrasting the cool, suffocating containment of 19th-century feminine domesticity with the infinite freedom of the sunlit Tuscan hills. The woman pouring her soul into the piano keys is known to be Virginia Batelli, accompanied by her sisters. Virginia was Lega’s great love and muse during his time with the family in rural Piagentina. Tragically, she succumbed to tuberculosis just three years after the painting's completion, a devastation that catalysed Lega’s subsequent spiral into depression and eventual blindness. While the painting looks incredibly detailed and smooth at a distance, a closer look reveals that the shimmering fabric of the dresses, the floral patterns on the curtains, and the distant hills are illustrated entirely from sharp, contrasting patches of light and shadow. This execution honours the radical tenets of the Macchiaioli movement, a revolutionary avant-garde of which Lega was one of the most original interpreters. Furthermore, paying homage to early Renaissance masters like Piero della Francesca, Lega uses a strict, mathematical grid, evident in the hard vertical lines of the open window, the sharp perspective of the piano, and the geometric floor tiles, to trap the figures in an absolute, frozen stillness. By showing these women singing a 'stornello', that usually centres round themes of love, longing, or satirical protest, Lega perhaps hints at an unspoken yearning- a quiet, melodic desire to escape the rigid, suffocating boundaries of 19th-century bourgeois life.
