Caravaggios Boy With A Basket of Fruit On View Focus Exhibit To Be Held At The Morgan
December 12, 2025
The Morgan Library & Museum will present Caravaggios Boy with a Basket of Fruit in Focus, celebrating the extraordinary loan of this important early masterpiece by Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571-1610) from the Galleria Borghese in Rome. On view from Jan. 16 through April 19, 2026, the exhibition showcases what can be considered Caravaggios first masterpiece alongside a group of 10 works that place the painting in context, from the artists influences to those he influenced. Trained in his native Lombardy, Caravaggio brought to Rome a tradition of naturalism that stretched back to Leonardo da Vincis work in Milan. He combined this tradition with a revolutionary approach to painting that shattered the illusion of art and celebrated the artifice of the studio. Boy with a Basket of Fruit (ca. 1595), in which these key elements of Caravaggios art come together for the first time, marks the beginning of a revolution in Italian painting. Caravaggio captures the imagination in a way that almost no other artist can, said Colin B. Bailey, Katharine J. Rayner director of the Morgan Library & Museum. We are exceptionally fortunate to be able to bring this masterpiece from the Galleria Borghese to share with visitors in New York for the first time in the 21st century, accompanied by works that illuminate his impact on the field of painting. Boy with a Basket of Fruit marks a turning point in Italian painting, said John Marciari, Charles W. Engelhard curator, department head of drawings and prints, and director of curatorial affairs. It is a linchpin between the naturalism of Caravaggios sources and his radical interventions in exposing the artifice of painting. To see this painting in context is to understand the revolution it represents. With his parted lips, flushed ears, and shirt slipping from his shoulder, the boy in the painting is far from the idealized figures typically depicted in Roman painting at the time. Caravaggio painted neither a God nor a saint, but an artists model, captured on the canvas and seemingly offered to us for examination, much like the fruit the boy presents to the viewer. The exhibition juxtaposes this remarkable work with some precedents for its naturalism, including earlier paintings from Milan, such as Four Seasons in One Head (ca. 1590) by Giuseppe Arcimboldo (1527-1593), on loan from the National Gallery of Art. Other precedents include Boy Drinking (ca. 1583) by Caravaggios slightly older contemporary Annibale Carracci (15601609). A significant loan from a private collection, this painting has never been on public view. Also exhibited are two works by Caravaggios early mentors and influences: a drawing by Simone Peterzano (ca. 1535-1599), who was the young Caravaggios teacher in Milan, and a study by Giuseppe Cesari (1568-1640), in whose studio Caravaggio worked in Rome. Although Caravaggio would eventually turn away from preparatory drawings in favor of painting directly on the canvas, these works provide context for his training. The installation also includes a selection of works that document the powerful impact Caravaggio had on Roman art, including A Life Study: A Monk Sleeping against a Pile of Books (ca. 1616) by Rutilio Manetti (1571-1639) and Basket of Fruit (ca. 1620) by Bartolomeo Cavarozzi (1587-1625). These show the ways in which the artists who followed Caravaggio continued to reveal the fiction of art, from highlighting the real-life models who sat for them to emphasizing the imperfections in the subjects of their still-life paintings. The exhibition concludes with the Morgans remarkable portrait drawing of Cardinal Scipione Borghese (1577-1633) by Gianlorenzo Bernini (15981680). Borghese, the collector largely responsible for the Galleria Borghese, was the early owner of Boy with a Basket of Fruit, which has been part of the Borghese collection since 1607. Caravaggios Boy with a Basket of Fruit in Focus is curated by Marciari. An illustrated brochure with an introductory essay written by Marciari will be offered in the gallery at no charge to visitors thanks to the generosity of the Foundation for Italian Art & Culture (FIAC). To learn more, visit www.themorgan.org.

SHARE
PRINT