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Black queen
複製画のサイズ
The history of the Portuguese colonial era is often told through the dry accounts of administrative ledgers and military reports, yet it finds its most vibrant and human expression in the delicate watercolors of Carlo Juliani. Born in 1740 in the elegant Italian city of Turin, Juliani was a man of dual identities: a disciplined officer of the Portuguese colonial army and a sensitive observer of the world’s diverse human tapestry. While his official duties as a military engineer and fortress inspector required a mathematical precision and an eye for structural fortification, his artistic soul sought to capture the ephemeral beauty of the people and landscapes that defined the vast reaches of the Portuguese Empire.
Juliani’s life was characterized by a remarkable movement across continents. Though his roots were Italian, his career was inextricably linked to the Portuguese crown, a connection hinted at by his paternal lineage and solidified by his rise through the ranks of the royal artillery regiment. By 1800, he had ascended to the rank of colonel, a testament to his professional competence. However, it is not his military prowess that has secured his immortality, but rather his ability to translate the complex social hierarchies and ethnic richness of the colonies into a visual language that remains indispensable to historians today.
What makes Juliani’s work so profoundly captivating is the way he blended the technical rigor of an engineer with the empathetic gaze of a portraitist. His travels took him through India, China, and most notably, the burgeoning territories of Brazil. Although historical records suggest he may not have settled in Brazil himself, his drawings—often based on detailed reports, official documents, and perhaps fleeting, intense visits—serve as one of the most significant iconographic records of the period. He did not merely draw landscapes; he documented the very pulse of colonial life.
His watercolor series are celebrated for their meticulous attention to detail, particularly in his depictions of racial and social types. Through his brush, we encounter a world of profound diversity:
The technical mastery displayed in Juliani’s work reflects the influence of the great Baroque traditions of his youth. One can sense the echoes of masters like Domenichino and Lanfranco in his command of light and form, yet he applied these classical sensibilities to a much more modern, ethnographic purpose. His ability to use watercolor—a medium that allows for both transparency and sudden, vibrant pigment—was perfectly suited to the humid, sun-drenched landscapes of South America and the intricate textures of colonial textiles.
Though many of his most significant works were published posthumously, such as the pictorial travel account released by the Brazilian National Library in 1960, his impact was felt long before then. He transformed the role of the military artist from a mere recorder of maps into a chronicler of humanity. Today, Carlo Juliani is remembered not just as an engineer of fortresses, but as an architect of memory, whose delicate watercolors allow us to peer through the veil of centuries and witness the vibrant, complex, and often turbulent birth of a modern Atlantic world.
1740 - 1811 , Italy
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