
Portrait of a Gentleman
Pietro Marescalchi·c. 1545
Historical Context
Pietro Marescalchi's Portrait of a Gentleman from around 1545 represents the portrait tradition practiced in the Veneto during the mid-sixteenth century, absorbing influence from both Titian's commanding manner and the more intimate Bergamasque tradition of Moroni and Lotto. Marescalchi worked in Feltre, a small Venetian subject city, and his portraits served the provincial gentry who could not afford Titian but sought the same combination of dignity and psychological presence. The three-quarter pose, the plain background, and the direct gaze derive from the Venetian portrait tradition Titian had established, filtered through the provincial practice of a painter working for a less cosmopolitan clientele. The portrait demonstrates the broad diffusion of Venetian portrait conventions throughout the terraferma during the mid-sixteenth century.
Technical Analysis
The Venetian-influenced technique employs rich, warm tones and fluid brushwork characteristic of the regional school. The gentleman's features are modeled with warm flesh tones against a dark background, while the costume is rendered with attention to the texture of fabric. The overall handling reflects the loose, painterly approach of the Venetian tradition.
Provenance
Private collection, Warsaw [according to authentication documents supplied by the Van Diemen Galleries to Mr. and Mrs. William R. Timken, copy in curatorial file; Polish provenance is confirmed by the Warsaw customs seal on the stretcher]. Van Diemen Galleries, Berlin and New York, by 1926 [see opinion by August L. Mayer dated November 27, 1926 in documents cited above]; sold by Van Diemen Galleries to Mr. and Mrs. William R. Timken, New York, by 1929 [lent by them to New York 1929]; given to the Art Institute, 1951.
See It In Person
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