The Reading Girl (La Leggitrice)

model 1856, carved 1861

Pietro Magni

Sculptor, Italian, 1817 - 1877

Carved from white marble, a young woman sits turned to face the back of a wooden chair, where she props the open book she reads in this free-standing sculpture. In this photograph, her knees face us but her body and head are turned slightly to our left, toward the ladderback of the chair, so we see her face almost in profile as she looks down at the book. Her long hair is loosely tied back at the nape of her neck. She has a straight nose and her lips are closed. A delicate tear falls from her left eye, closer to us. A loose, short-sleeved garment falls open over her right shoulder so her breast is exposed. A medallion with a portrait of a man hangs from a long string around her neck. She holds the book open with her right hand, farther away from us, and her other hand rests in her lap. The book lies on more fabric bunching over the back of the chair. Her bare feet, crossed at the ankle, peek out from under her long garment so one foot extends beyond the edge of the marble base on which the chair rests.

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Pietro Magni's marble statue The Reading Girl brought the Milanese sculptor international fame and recognition. It was exhibited numerous times at international exhibitions throughout Europe and America, each time to great public and critical acclaim. Stylistically it owes much to the artistic tradition of verismo or "realism" that characterized Italian art during the middle years of the nineteenth century, but it also recalls earlier aspects of Italian romanticism. In its seated pose and realistic carving of chair, clothing, and anatomy, The Reading Girl attests to many of the important verismo principles then being advocated by Italian sculptors, most notably by Magni's teacher at the Brera Academy in Milan, Vincenzo Vela (1820-1891). Magni's commitment to verismo ideas, however, achieves psychological complexity through a host of subtle details rich in their associative meanings.

The young girl sits in a common rush chair placed on a rough tile floor, which suggests her working-class origins. The back of the chair acts as a prop for both her book and the dress which drapes over the chair's back. Her seated position, turned sideways, creates a gentle shift in the axis of her body, reinforcing the feeling of absorption in her reading and discreetly calling attention to the fact that she wears only a nightgown, which has slipped from one shoulder to reveal her breast. A single tear streaks the young girl's left cheek near her eye. Suspended around her neck on a simple knotted cord is a portrait medallion of the Italian patriot Giuseppe Garibaldi.

The content of the book has obviously moved her. Its words (based on a text legible in the first exhibited version of the sculpture) are lines by the Italian poet and playwright Giovanni Battista Niccolini (1782-1861), whose writings celebrated themes of Lombard freedom and deliverance from Austrian oppression during the uprisings of 1848. This young reader responds, therefore, to sentiments that will soon find their fullest expression in the Italian Risorgimento. The Reading Girl may very well represent Italy itself, soon to come into maturity as a nation. In this regard, The Reading Girl fuses verismo concepts of truth to nature and close observation with emotional insight, all in service to a rising Italian patriotic sentiment.

Contemporary observers commented upon Magni's success in combining truth-of-the-moment realism with sincerity of expression. One English critic who viewed the work in the 1862 International Exhibition in London wrote:

Magni's "Reading Girl," truthful not only to the hem of a garment, to the turned leaf of the book, and the torn rushes from the bottom of cottage chair, but earnest as if the whole soul drank of the poetry and was filled, moves with a heartfelt pathos. [1]

A year later, another writer remarked upon the sculpture's patriotic aspect:

Such ardent and patriotic thoughts, prophetic in their inspiration, stir the young Italian maiden's heart, and her earnest look of attention is wonderfully rendered by the artist. [2]

Pietro Magni's The Reading Girl was a mid-century challenge, in marble, to the timeless quality and idealized content found in earlier neoclassical sculptures by Antonio Canova (1757-1822). In its livelier, more immediate, true-to-life aspects, it successfully appealed to a wide public and linked itself to the growing democratic vision of a united Italy.

Notes:

1. J. Beavington Atkinson, "International Exhibition, 1862," The Art-Journal I, new series (1862), 214.2. J.B.Waring, Masterpieces of Industrial Art and Sculpture at the International Exhibition, 3 vols., London, 1863, vol. 3, pl.253.

On View

West Building Ground Floor, Gallery G8


Artwork overview

  • Medium

    marble

  • Credit Line

    Patrons' Permanent Fund

  • Dimensions

    height without base: 122 cm (48 1/16 in.)
    base (height): 51.5 cm (20 1/4 in.)

  • Accession

    2003.84.1


Artwork history & notes

Provenance

Probably purchased at time of the 1862 International Exhibition in London[1] by George Swan Nottage [1823-1885], Chairman of the London Stereoscopic Company, official photographers to the exhibition.[2] Probably acquired c. 1900/1901 by Anne Elizabeth Page Croft [Mrs. Richard Benyon Croft, d. 1912], Fanhams Hall, Ware, Hertfordshire;[3] her second son, Sir Henry Page-Croft, 1st lord Croft [d. 1947], Fanhams Hall; his sister, Anne, Lady Brocket [d. 1949], Fanhams Hall; (her estate sale, Sotheby's, London, 2-5 October 1950, 4th day, no. 1001, sold but not removed from Fanhams Hall);[4] acquired December 1950 with Fanhams Hall by National Westminster Bank;[5] transferred 1971 to the bank's staff college at Heythorp Park, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire; (sale, Sotheby's, London, 5 July 2000, no. 148); private collection; sold through (Sotheby's, London) to Dr. William Conte, Greenwich, Connecticut; sold 6 June 2003 through (Robert Haber, New York) to NGA.
[1] According to the catalogue of the 5 July 2000 Sotheby's sale (no. 148), the NGA sculpture was the one actually exhibited in London, on loan from the Italian Ministry of Public Instruction. Nicholas Penny, "Pietro Magni and his Reading Girl," In La Sculpture au XIXe Siècle: Mélanges pour Anne Pingeot, Paris, 2008: 158-164, proposes that the NGA sculpture is a copy of the one exhibited, a copy that was commissioned by the London Stereoscopic Company.
[2] Diane Bilbey, with Marjorie Trusted, British Sculpture 1470-2000, London, 2002: 341-342. The Company lent the sculpture to the 1865 Dublin International Exhibition.
[3] Henry Page purchased Fanhams Hall in 1859, but did not take up personal residence, and instead rented it to tenants. However, various improvements were made to the residence in the early 1870s in order that it could serve as a home for his daughter, Anne Elizabeth, and her husband, Lieutenant Richard Benyon Croft, who had married on 22 September 1869. The house technically remained the property of the Page family until 1899, when Henry Page's widow died, and his daughter inherited the estate. The Crofts occupied the house until their deaths, Lt. Croft on 28 January 1912 and his wife later the same year on 6 October.
After she inherited the property, however, Mrs. Croft had embarked on a complete rebuilding of Fanhams Hall, and during 1900 and 1901 she also redeveloped and improved the gardens surrounding the house, and likely acquired the sculpture. (See "The Full History of Fanhams Hall" on the following Web site: http://www.fanhamshall.co.uk/fullhistory.htm)
[4] A marked copy of the sale catalogue indicates that Lady Pearson, the last surviving Croft daughter (there were eight children), purchased the sculpture for 5 pounds. For unknown reasons, it did not leave the property.
[5] The 1950 sale was of the contents of Fanhams Hall. The Hall itself was acquired by the Westminster Bank as a residential training school for their staff.

Associated Names

Exhibition History

1865

  • International Exhibition of Arts and Manufactures, Dublin, 1865, no. 16 (under Sculptures).

Bibliography

1862

  • Atkinson, J. Beavington. "International Exhibition, 1862." The Art-Journal I, new series (1862): 214.

1864

  • "The Reading Girl." The Art-Journal III, new series (1864): 56, repro.

1975

  • Caramel, Luciano, and Carlo Pirovano. Galleria d'arte moderna: opere dell'Ottocento. 3 vols. Milan, 1975: 2:343.

1992

  • De Micheli, Mario. La Scultura dell'Ottocento. Torino, 1992: 96-97.

1998

  • Tedeschi, Francesco. "La Leggitrice di Pietro Magni. Vicende e problemi storico-critici." Rivista di storia dell'arte dell'OttoNovecento 1998: 1:5-12.

2003

  • Penny, Nicholas. "Pietro Magni, The Reading Girl (La Leggitrice)." National Gallery of Art Bulletin no. 30 (Fall 2003): 14-15, repros.

2008

  • Grandesco, Stefano. "La leggitrice." In Maria Vittoria Marini Clarelli, Fernando Mazzocca, and Carlo Sisi, eds. Ottocento. Da Canova al Quarto Stato. Exh. cat. Scuderie del Qurinale, Rome, 2008: 274.

  • Penny, Nicholas. "Pietro Magni and his Reading Girl." In La Sculpture au XIXe Siècle: Mélanges pour Anne Pingeot. Paris, 2008: 158-164, figs. 1, 2, 3 (detail), 4 (detail).

Inscriptions

on the paving near the sitter's foot: P Magni / Milano 1861; on front of base: THE READING GIRL / BY MAGNI. / FROM THE EXHIBITION OF 1862.

Wikidata ID

Q63862035


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