Tuesday, February 28, 2023

Portrait-Making (Literal and Fanciful) - XVII

attributed to the Master of the Countess of Warwick
Elizabeth Fitzgerald, later Countess of Lincoln
("The Fair Geraldine")
ca. 1560-70
oil on panel
National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin

François Clouet
François de la Rochefoucauld,
seigneur de Ravel et de Rascel

ca. 1558
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Anonymous Italian Artist
Portrait of a Nobleman in Armour
ca. 1540-60
oil on canvas
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

Bartolomeo Veneto
Portrait of Lodovico Martinengo
1546
oil on panel
National Gallery, London

John  Bettes the Elder
Portrait of a Man in a Black Cap
1545
oil on panel
Tate Britain

Corneille de Lyon
Portrait of François de Bonnivet
ca. 1545
oil on panel
Toledo Museum of Art, Ohio

Corneille de Lyon
Portrait of a Man
ca. 1540
oil on panel
Indianapolis Museum of Art

Bernardino Luini
Portrait of a Woman
before 1532
drawing
Musée du Louvre

Jan Gossaert
Portrait of a Man with Gloves
ca. 1530-32
oil on panel
National Gallery, London

Jan Gossaert
Portrait of a Nobleman
ca. 1530
oil on panel
Gemäldegalerie, Berlin

Simon Bening
Portrait of a Man
1525
gouache on vellum
Musée du Louvre

Rosso Fiorentino
Portrait of a Knight of Saint John
ca. 1523-24
oil on panel
National Gallery, London

Rosso Fiorentino
Portrait of a Young Man holding a Letter
1518
oil on panel
National Gallery, London

Domenico Capriolo
Portrait of a Youth in Armour
ca. 1520
oil on panel
Gemäldegalerie, Berlin

Macrino d'Alba
Portrait of Anne d'Alençon, Marchesa di Monferrato
ca. 1518
oil on panel
Chiesa di Santa Maria di Crea a Casale Monferrato

Anonymous Netherlandish Artist
Portrait of a Princess with a Falcon
16th century
watercolor on vellum
Musée du Louvre

"To be a good Face-Painter, a degree of the Historical, and Poetical Genius is requisite, and a great Measure of the other Talents, and Advantages which a good History-Painter must possess: Nay some of them, particularly Colouring, he ought to have in greater Perfection than is absolutely necessary for a History-Painter." 

"A Portrait-Painter must understand Mankind, and enter into their Characters, and express their Minds as well as their Faces: And as his Business is chiefly with People of Condition, he must Think as a Gentleman, and a Man of Sense, or 'twill be impossible to give Such their True, and Proper Resemblances."

"But if a Painter of this kind is not oblig'd to take in such a compass of Knowledge as he that paints History, and that the Latter upon Some accounts is the nobler Employment, upon Others the Preference is due to Face-Painting; and the peculiar Difficulties such a one has to encounter will perhaps balance what he is excused from.  He is chiefly concerned with the Noblest, and most Beautiful part of Humane Nature, the Face; and is obliged to the utmost Exactness.  A History-Painter has vast Liberties; if he is to give Life, and Greatness, and Grace to his Figures, and the Airs of his Heads, he may chuse what Faces, and Figures he pleases; but the Other must give all that (in some degree at least) to Subjects where 'tis not always to be found, and must Find, or Make Variety in much narrower Bounds than the History-Painter has to Range in." 

– Jonathan Richardson, Senior, from Essay on the Theory of Painting (1725)