A Space of Their Own

Rosalba Carriera

January 12, 1673–April 15, 1757

Active in: Italy, France, Austria

Biography

A specialist in pastel portraiture, Rosalba Carriera helped popularize the pastel medium in the eighteenth century. She was born in Venice in 1673 to Andrea Carriera, a lawyer, and Alba Foresti, an artist who specialized in embroidery and lacemaking. She and her sisters were taught lacemaking as children and she began to paint in the early 1700s, beginning with portrait miniatures on ivory. Little is definitively known about her training outside of the home, but it is thought that she trained with both Venetian and French artists, including Giuseppe Diamantini (1621–1705) and Antonio Balestra (1666–1740). She began to experiment with pastels around 1700 and completed her first known pastel portrait in 1703. In 1704, she was admitted to the Accademia di San Luca in Rome as an Accademico di merito, a title reserved for painters who lived outside of the city.

Carriera’s talents as a portraitist became well-known and her earliest sitters included Frederick IV of Denmark (1671–1730) and Augustus the Strong, King of Poland and Elector of Saxony (1670–1733). In 1720 and 1721, she lived in Paris where her work became exceedingly popular. Her sister, Giovanna, helped her with the portraits she was commissioned to complete during this period and the corresponding income went to support the Carriera family. Her popularity helped shape the emerging aristocratic taste for what became known as the Rococo style. Over the course of her career, she taught many younger women artists including Margherita Terzi, Felicità Sartori (1714–1760), and Marianna Carlevarijs (1703–1750).

Despite her professional success in Paris, she returned to Venice, although she continued to make shorter trips to cities like Parma and Modena, where she was received in various courts and aristocratic circles. In 1730, she traveled to Vienna and found an enthusiastic patron in Holy Emperor Charles VI, who acquired well over one hundred of her works. In 1738, Giovanna died unexpectedly; Carierra was deeply affected by this tragedy, which corresponded with the beginning of progressive vision loss. She underwent two cataract surgeries but still lost her vision completely in 1751. She outlived the rest of her family members and died in Venice in 1757, at the age of 84.

Selected Works

Bibliography

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