Young Woman in a Black Dress explained

Young Woman in a Black Dress
Artist:Titian
Year:c. 1520[1]
Medium:oil on canvas
Height Metric:59.5
Width Metric:44.5
Museum:Kunsthistorisches Museum
City:Vienna

The Young Woman in a Black Dress is an oil painting by Titian, dating to c. 1520.[1] It is held at the Kunsthistorisches Museum, in Vienna. It was later misattributed to Palma il Vecchio, then to Giovanni Cariani, until Roberto Longhi reattributed it as by Titian, which is now the critical consensus.

Description

It depicts a woman half-length, facing the viewer, with her torso slightly twisted to give a sense of movement. One hand holds her black dress over her white shift, with a generous cleavage. The woman's physical type recurs in several other works by the artist, such as Flora and Woman with a Mirror - she may have been Titian's mistress, or simply a recurring model.

See also

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Junge Frau in schwarzem Kleid . Kunsthistorisches Museum. 29 November 2012.