Jean Galli de Bibiena


Jean Galli de Bibiena was an 18th-century French-speaking writer, born in 1709 in Nancy and who may have died in 1779 in Italy. He was the son of Francesco Galli Bibiena, of the famous Galli da Bibiena family.

Biography

Little is known about him, except that he chose France and literature whereas his family was primarily composed of decorative painters and theater architects. If his first two novels "felt a little too foreign," "the following novels were more in the French taste They took place in the traditional world of the sentimental and gallant novel."
Published in 1747, his novel La Poupée tells the story of a sylph who teaches love to "a young priest still virgin and very conceited". If we can consider that this novel fits into the current of libertinage, it is nevertheless appropriate to distinguish it from the works of Crébillon, Sade or Laclos insofar Bibiena, through his characters, presented more an aesthetic pleasure and an art of seduction in which the relations of power and conquest idea played a much smaller role than in other libertine novels of the eighteenth century.
In 1762, his play met some success.
In 1763, he was convicted of raping a girl and "sentenced to death in absentia since he fled immediately." He may have died in Italy in 1779.

Publications