Woman Holding an Apple explained

Woman Holding an Apple
Height Metric:97.8
Width Metric:73.8
Metric Unit:cm
Imperial Unit:in
Museum:National Gallery of Art
City:Washington, D.C.
Accession:1939.1.292

Woman Holding an Apple, also known as Portrait of a Lady, is an oil painting by Titian, made in around 1550, which hangs in the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.

Description

The subject stands at three-quarter length, turned to the left, looking at the spectator. She has long blonde hair and fair skin, and holds an apple in her hands. She wears a green robe, with jewelled border, over a white dress with long sleeves and gold border.

Analysis

In 1940, it was published in The Art News as "Portrait of a Lady in Green, presumably Giulia di Gonzaga-Colonna, Duchess of Traeetto".[1] In 1941, the Duveen Brothers titled it "Portrait of Giulia di Gonzaga-Colonna [Presumed]".[2] The tentative identification with the Italian noblewoman of that name is not accepted today, and cannot be sustained with any historical source. Indeed, it may not represent a particular woman in the traditional sense of portraiture, but rather an idealised form of female beauty. The model may be Lavinia, Titian's daughter, who is known to have posed for several of his pictures.[3]

See also

Sources

Notes and References

  1. The Art News, 38(24): p. 9.
  2. Duveen Brothers 1941.
  3. Preliminary Catalogue 1941, p. 198.