An Old Man and his Grandson (Italian: Ritratto di vecchio con nipote) is a ca. 1490 tempera painting by the Italian Renaissance artist Domenico Ghirlandaio. One of Ghirlandaio's best-known works, it is considered notable for its emotional poignancy. Its realism has been described as unique among the portraits of the Quattrocento.[1]
Description
The picture portrays an older man in a red robe, embracing a young child who is also wearing red. They sit in an interior, illuminated against a darkened wall. Behind them at right is a window through which can be seen a generalized landscape, its uneven terrain and winding roads typical of Ghirlandaio's backgrounds.[2] Although the man's fur-lined robe and cappuccio and the boy's elegant doublet and cap indicate a noble heritage,[3] and despite the traditional assumption that the subjects are grandfather and grandson, their identities are unknown.[2] It is possible that the painting was commemorative in purpose, and that the child was a narrative invention intended to emphasize the man's beneficence.[4] The poignancy of the image is dramatized by the contrast between the man's weathered and wise face, and the child's delicate profile. While the composition is thematically related to portraiture from the Netherlands, by the mid-15th century the motif of a portrait in an interior with a landscape seen in the distance was common in Italy.[1][4]
An extraordinary feature of the painting is the deformity of the man's nose, evidence of rhinophyma. Ghirlandaio has presented the portrait in a naturalistic and sympathetic fashion, at variance with physiognomic theory of the era, which maintained a connection between external appearances and internal truths.[1][2] Rather than implying a defect of character, An Old Man and his Grandson invites appreciation of the man's virtuousness.[1] The painting depicts a moment of intimacy between an old man and a child, underscored by the placement of the child's hand on the man's chest, and the man's gentle expression. This show of affection endows the picture with emotional qualities beyond those expected from a traditional dynastic portrait.[5] In the words of art historian Bernard Berenson, "There is no more human picture in the entire range of Quattrocento painting, whether in or out of Italy."[6]
The painting's provenance is uncertain until 1880, when it entered the Louvre, and then only after it was rejected by the Kaiser Friedrich Museum in Berlin out of concern for its condition.[2] Several commentators in the late nineteenth century reported that the picture had been abraded by overcleaning, and there were disfiguring scratches on the man's face.[2] In 1996 the scratches and areas of discolored inpainting were removed, and the painting was cleaned and retouched.[2]
A drawing by Ghirlandaio entitled Head of an Old Man, once owned by Giorgio Vasari, portrays the same man as in the painting. The drawing may have been made while the sitter was asleep, or after his death, in which case it would have served as a graphic death mask.[7]
Notes
- ^ a b c d Cadogan, 176
- ^ a b c d e f Cadogan, 276
- ^ Jones
- ^ a b Old Man with a Young Boy, Louvre
- ^ Cadogan, 277
- ^ Berenson, 192
- ^ Cadogan, 304
References
- Berenson, Bernard. Looking at Pictures with Bernard Berenson. New York, Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 1974. ISBN 0-8109-0042-4
- Cadogan, Jean K. Domenico Ghirlandaio: Artist and Artisan. New Haven and London, Yale University Press, 2000. ISBN 0-300-08720-9
- Jones, Jonathan. Old Man with His Grandson, Ghirlandaio (c1490), The Guardian. 21 June 2002.
- Old Man with a Young Boy, Louvre
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| Paintings |
- Santa Fina Chapel frescoes (1477–1478)
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| French | |
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| Italian |
- Fra Angelico: Coronation of the Virgin
- Antonello da Messina: Christ at the Column
- Arcimboldo: The Four Seasons
- Bellini: Christ Blessing; Madonna and Child with Saint Peter and Saint Sebastian; Portrait of a Young Man
- Botticelli: Three Scenes from the Life of Esther; Venus and the Three Graces Presenting Gifts to a Young Woman; A Young Man Being Introduced to the Seven Liberal Arts
- Caravaggio: Death of the Virgin; The Fortune Teller; Portrait of Alof de Wignacourt and his Page
- Carpaccio: The Sermon of St. Stephen
- Carracci: Fishing; Hunting
- Cimabue: Maestà
- Correggio: Allegory of Vice; Allegory of Virtue; Mystic Marriage of Saint Catherine; Venus and Cupid with a Satyr
- Costa: Allegory of Isabella d'Este's Coronation; Reign of Comus
- Ghirlandaio: ; Visitation
- Giordano: Adoration of the Shepherds; Marriage of the Virgin
- Giotto: Saint Francis Receiving the Stigmata
- Guardi: The Doge on the Bucintoro near the Riva di Sant'Elena
- Leonardo: Bacchus; La belle ferronnière; Mona Lisa; Saint John the Baptist; The Virgin and Child with Saint Anne; Virgin of the Rocks
- Lippi: Barbadori Altarpiece; The Healing of Justinian the Canon; Saint Francis Receiving the Stigmata
- Lotto: Christ Carrying the Cross; Holy Family with the Family of St John the Baptist; Saint Jerome in Penitence
- Mantegna: Crucifixion; Judgement of Solomon; Madonna della Vittoria; Parnassus; Saint Sebastian; Triumph of the Virtues
- Martini: The Carrying of the Cross
- Moretto: Saints Bonaventure and Anthony of Padua; Saints Bernardino of Siena and Louis of Toulouse
- Palmezzano: Dead Christ
- Panini: Ancient Rome
- Parmigianino: Mystic Marriage of Saint Catherine
- Perugino: Apollo and Daphnis; The Battle Between Love and Chastity; Madonna and Child with St John the Baptist and St Catherine of Alexandria; Madonna and Child with St Rose and St Catherine (with Ingegno); St Sebastian; Young Saint with a Sword
- Piero della Francesca: Portrait of Sigismondo Pandolfo Malatesta
- Pisanello: Portrait of a Princess
- Pittoni: The Continence of Scipio; Christ Giving the Keys to Saint Peter
- Raphael: Angel Holding a Phylactery; La belle jardinière; Holy Family of Francis I; Madonna with the Blue Diadem (with Penni); Portrait of Baldassare Castiglione; Saint George; Saint Michael; Saint Michael Vanquishing Satan; Self-Portrait with a Friend; Small Holy Family
- Reni: The Abduction of Helen; Annunciation
- Romano: Portrait of Doña Isabel de Requesens y Enríquez de Cardona-Anglesola (with Raphael)
- Salviati: The Incredulity of Saint Thomas
- Savoldo: Portrait of a Clad Warrior
- Signorelli: Adoration of the Magi; Birth of John the Baptist
- Tintoretto: Self Portrait
- Titian: Allegory of Marriage; The Crowning with Thorns; The Entombment of Christ; Madonna of the Rabbit; Man with a Glove; Pardo Venus; Pastoral Concert (also attributed to Giorgione); Pilgrims at Emmaus; Saint Jerome in Penitence; Virgin and Child with Saints Stephen, Jerome and Maurice; Woman with a Mirror
- Tura: Pietà with Saints
- Uccello: The Battle of San Romano
- Veronese: The Wedding at Cana
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| Northern |
- Bosch: Ship of Fools
- Bruegel: The Beggars
- Christus: Lamentation (Pietà)
- David: Cervara Altarpiece; Triptych of the Sedano family
- Dürer: Portrait of the Artist Holding a Thistle
- van Dyck: Charles I at the Hunt; Crucifixion with the Virgin Mary, St John and St Mary Magdalene; Madonna and Child with Two Donors
- van Eyck: Madonna of Chancellor Rolin
- Friedrich: The Tree of Crows; Seaside by Moonlight
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- Matsys: The Money Changer and His Wife
- Memling: Diptych of an elderly couple
- Metsu: The Vegetable Market in Amsterdam
- van Ostade: The Fish Market
- Rembrandt: The Archangel Raphael Leaving Tobias' Family; Bathsheba at Her Bath; Landscape with a Castle; Pendant portraits of Marten Soolmans and Oopjen Coppit; Philosopher in Meditation; Saint Matthew and the Angel; Self-Portrait; Slaughtered Ox
- Rubens: Helena Fourment with a Carriage; Helena Fourment with Children; Hercules and Omphale; Ixion, King of the Lapiths, Deceived by Juno, Who He Wished to Seduce; Marie de' Medici cycle; The Village Fête; The Virgin and Child Surrounded by the Holy Innocents
- Ruisdael: Dune Landscape near Haarlem; The Ray of Light; Storm Off a Sea Coast
- Scheffer: Francesca da Rimini and Paolo Malatesta Appraised by Dante and Virgil
- Vermeer: The Astronomer; The Lacemaker
- van der Weyden: Annunciation Triptych; Braque Triptych
- Wtewael: Perseus Freeing Andromeda
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| Spanish |
- El Greco: Christ on the Cross Adored by Two Donors; Portrait of Antonio de Covarrubias; Saint Louis
- Goya: Portrait of Ferdinand Guillemardet; Portrait of the Marquise de la Solana; Still Life of a Lamb's Head and Flanks
- Murillo: The Birth of the Virgin; The Young Beggar
- Ribera: The Clubfoot
- Zurbarán: Displaying the Body of Saint Bonaventure; Saint Apollonia
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| English |
- Bonington: Francis I, Charles V and the Duchess of Étampes
- Lewis: Street Scene near the El Ghouri Mosque in Cairo
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- Leutze: Christopher Columbus Before the Council of Salamanca
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