'Tiepolo: the last breath of happiness in Europe'The eighteenth-century Venetian painter
Giambattista Tiepolo spent his life creating frescoes that are among the glories of Western art
yet he remains shrouded in mystery. Who was he? And what was the significance of the dark
bizarre etchings depicting sacrifice and magic which he created alongside his heavenly works?
Roberto Calasso explores Tiepolo as the last artist of the ancien régime and at the same time
the first example of the painter of modern life evoked by Baudelaire. He was the incarnation of
that peculiar Italian virtue sprezzatura: the art of not seeming artful.Translated by Alastair
McEwen'A brilliant eccentric provocative . . . and thoroughly splendid celebration of a great
painter' John Banville The New Republic'Calasso is a myth-maker ... a book that treats
paintings as a kind of sorcery' Peter Conrad Observer