Salome (Titian, Madrid) Explained

Salome
Artist:Titian
Medium:Oil on canvas
Height Metric:87
Width Metric:80
Metric Unit:cm
Imperial Unit:in
Museum:Museo del Prado
City:Madrid

Salome, also known as Salome with the Head of John the Baptist (Spanish: Salomè con la testa di Giovanni Battista), is an oil painting by the Venetian painter Titian, made in about 1550, and currently in the collection of the Museo del Prado in Madrid. It is not to be confused with other compositions of Salome and Judith by Titian.

Subject

Salome, in Jewish history, was the name borne by three women of the Herod dynasty. Titian depicts the daughter of Herodias by her first husband Herod Philip. She was the wife successively of Philip the Tetrarch and Aristobulus, son of Herod of Chalcis. This Salome is the only one of the three who is mentioned in the New Testament,[1] and only in connection with the execution of John the Baptist. Herod Antipas, pleased by her dancing, offered her a reward "unto the half of my kingdom"; instructed by Herodias, she asked for John the Baptist's "head in a charger".[2]

History

The picture was painted about 1550. It was possibly once in the collection of Charles I of England, and later entered the collection of Charles II of Spain. Crowe and Cavalcaselle called it "evidently [the] work of an imitator".[3] Charles Ricketts ascribed to the later 1560s supposed retouches by Titian upon the Salome of the Prado, which he considered "otherwise a poor studio variant" of the Lavinia with the Charger, painted in the 1550s.[4] Walter Gronau, with others, have thought it an original work by Titian.[5]

Analysis

The composition of the painting is similar to the portrait of Lavinia at Berlin. According to Georg Gronau, "The colouring is more brilliant, deeper, in the Madrid picture."

Provenance

See also

Sources

Notes and References

  1. [Matthew 14:3]
  2. Chisholm, ed. 1911, p. 85.
  3. Gronau 1904, p. 304.
  4. Ricketts 1910, p. 147.
  5. Falomir Faus 2014.