Aimee Ng: "Truth and Fiction in Italian Renaissance Portraiture"

00:48:43
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LP8zZgC7ohY

Resumo

TLDRThe Frick Collection is presenting "Moroni: The Richness of Renaissance Portraiture," the first major show on Giovanni Battista Moroni in North America. Curated by Aimee Ng with collaborators from Italy, the exhibition is on display until June 2nd. Moroni, noted for his naturalistic style and portraiture of the 16th century, showcases works that provoke discussions about his influence in European art history. The exhibition sets out to explore themes of naturalism, the socioeconomics of Moroni's patrons, and the questions of artistic innovation. The lecture "Truth and Fiction in Italian Renaissance Portraiture," given by Aimee Ng herself, complements the exhibition, encouraging viewers to consider Moroni's unique contributions despite a career spent outside Europe's major artistic centers. Art lovers and history enthusiasts are invited to delve deeper into Moroni's art and influence through this significant exhibition.

Conclusรตes

  • ๐ŸŽจ Moroni brings unique insights into Renaissance portraiture.
  • ๐Ÿ–ผ๏ธ Displays until June 2nd at The Frick Collection.
  • ๐Ÿ›๏ธ First major North American Moroni exhibition.
  • ๐Ÿง‘โ€๐ŸŽจ Features naturalism, capturing detailed and vibrant personas.
  • ๐Ÿ“œ Connects with broader art history and influences.
  • ๐Ÿ”Ž Examines Moroni's socio-economic contexts.
  • โœ๏ธ Organized by Aimee Ng and prominent curators.
  • ๐Ÿ“š Accompanied by a thought-provoking lecture.
  • ๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡น Stresses Moroni's European yet locally rooted artistry.
  • ๐Ÿ“– Encourages reassessment of Moroni's art contributions.

Linha do tempo

  • 00:00:00 - 00:05:00

    Ian Wardropper, director of The Frick Collection, introduces a lecture on the exhibition 'Moroni: The Richness of Renaissance Portraiture'. The exhibition, featuring works by Giovanni Battista Moroni, is the first major show on this artist in North America. The lecture is given by Aimee Ng, associate curator at The Frick, who provides a professional background and overview of her involvement in past exhibitions.

  • 00:05:00 - 00:10:00

    Aimee Ng discusses the collaborative effort behind the Moroni exhibition and acknowledges contributions from co-curators and colleagues. She addresses the newfound attention on Moroni's work, specifically his influence on European portraiture and the socioeconomics of his patrons. She prompts conversations on the genius of Moroni and his portrayal of individuals like 'The Tailor', challenging notions of artistic fame and historical bias.

  • 00:10:00 - 00:15:00

    Ng explores Moroni's work, highlighting the artist's focus on portraiture over religious paintings. She contemplates Moroni's choices and the factors influencing his artistic output, including geographic and market constraints, hypothesizing on opportunities for artistic expression and genius outside major art centers. She uses Moroni's repeat patrons and stylistic formulas as a lens to discuss the artist's market-driven choices.

  • 00:15:00 - 00:20:00

    Ng challenges perceptions of Renaissance art, questioning the balance of realism and idealization in portraiture. She examines Moroni's 'naturalism', exploring how this woodworking factor is perceived both positively and negatively. By comparing Moroni to other artists, Ng discusses how historical critique often misses the nuanced artistry within his seemingly straightforward works.

  • 00:20:00 - 00:25:00

    Ng continues examining Moroni's artistic strategy, dissecting his use of models, backgrounds, and composition. She introduces the concept of 'sacred portraits', paintings that blend portrait and religious imagery, showcasing Moroni's innovative approach within traditional portraiture. Ng suggests that Moroni's regional position may have afforded him artistic freedoms unencumbered by the conventions of larger art centers.

  • 00:25:00 - 00:30:00

    Ng analyzes Moroni's choice of materials and craftsmanship by juxtaposing paintings with period artifacts. She reveals the intricate processes behind luxury items depicted in Moroni's work, emphasizing the artistic liberties Moroni took in rendering details, such as rich fabrics, to achieve a particular visual impact, thus highlighting the sophistication in his artistic decisions beyond mere replication of reality.

  • 00:30:00 - 00:35:00

    Ng focuses on specific portraits, revealing Moroni's dedication to capturing material authenticity through careful artistic manipulation of textures and details, such as in depicting brocade fabrics. This detailed exploration serves to illustrate Moroni's technique in balancing painterly abstraction with a semblance of detailed reality, challenging the notion that his works were simple mirrors of the real world.

  • 00:35:00 - 00:40:00

    Ng reflects on the broader cultural and geographic influences in Moroni's work. She asserts that despite working within regional confines, Moroni's art was informed by a rich tapestry of cultural exchanges, seen in the inclusion of diverse influences and objects within his portrayals. This point highlights the global connections present in seemingly 'local' art, enriched by a flow of people and goods from beyond Italy.

  • 00:40:00 - 00:48:43

    Ng concludes with reflections on the mysteries surrounding Moroni's life and work, from the lack of documentation to the nuances of his geographic choices. She invites further study of his portraits, asserting their value in art history and their capacity to surprise and captivate contemporary viewers, thus encouraging the audience to revisit Moroni's work in the gallery for deeper appreciation.

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Perguntas frequentes

  • What exhibition is being held at The Frick Collection?

    The Frick Collection is hosting "Moroni: The Richness of Renaissance Portraiture."

  • When will the Moroni exhibition be available for viewing?

    The exhibition will be on view until June 2nd.

  • Who organized the Moroni exhibition?

    The exhibition was organized by Aimee Ng, Arturo Galansino, and Simone Facchinetti.

  • Where is Giovanni Battista Moroni's place in art history discussed?

    Moroni's place in art history is discussed in relation to European portraiture, including whether he was more influential than previously thought.

  • What notable work of Moroni could have influenced Rembrandt?

    Moroni's painting "Bearded Man with a Letter" has been proposed to have influenced Rembrandt's "Nicolaes Ruts."

  • What is unique about Moroni's portrait "The Tailor"?

    "The Tailor" is noted for portraying a tradesman at work with significant psychological presence, which was revolutionary for the 16th century.

  • What themes are explored in the Moroni exhibition?

    The exhibition explores themes like naturalism, artistic innovation, and the socioeconomics of Moroniโ€™s patrons.

  • What is the lecture accompanying the exhibition titled?

    The lecture accompanying the exhibition is titled "Truth and Fiction in Italian Renaissance Portraiture."

  • What future project is Aimee Ng working on?

    Aimee Ng is working on an exhibition titled "Bertoldo di Giovanni: The Renaissance of Sculpture in Medici Florence."

  • Has Moroni's work been influential in modern art discussions?

    Yes, since the exhibition opening, Moroni's work sparked new conversations around his influence and place in art history.

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  • 00:01:07
    - Good evening, I'm Ian Wardropper,
  • 00:01:09
    director of The Frick Collection.
  • 00:01:10
    I'm delighted to welcome such a large crowd
  • 00:01:14
    of people to this lecture.
  • 00:01:16
    We've had to turn some people away
  • 00:01:18
    and we need a larger auditorium,
  • 00:01:20
    We're working on that right now
  • 00:01:23
    but I'm thrilled that there are so many people here
  • 00:01:25
    to hear the first lecture
  • 00:01:29
    accompanying the exhibition
  • 00:01:30
    Moroni: The Richness of Renaissance Portraiture.
  • 00:01:33
    This exhibition opened a week ago
  • 00:01:35
    and will be on view until June 2nd.
  • 00:01:39
    This is the first major show on this artist in North America
  • 00:01:43
    organized by tonight's speaker, Aimee Ng,
  • 00:01:46
    together with Arturo Galansino,
  • 00:01:48
    director of the Palazzo Strozzi in Florence
  • 00:01:52
    and Simone Facchinetti an independent researcher.
  • 00:01:56
    Aimee took her BFA at the Department of Art
  • 00:01:58
    Queen's University in Ontario
  • 00:02:01
    and PhD at Columbia in 2012.
  • 00:02:05
    She has lectured and written on topics
  • 00:02:07
    stemming from her dissertations concerned
  • 00:02:10
    artists and the Sack of Rome in 1527.
  • 00:02:13
    Before joining The Frick as associate curator in 2015,
  • 00:02:18
    she was Joseph F. McCrindle research assistant
  • 00:02:22
    in the Department of Prints and Drawings
  • 00:02:24
    at the Morgan Library and Museum,
  • 00:02:26
    and lecturer at Columbia from 2012 to 2014.
  • 00:02:31
    Her work for The Frick began as a guest curator
  • 00:02:34
    for The Poetry of Parmigianino's Schiava Turca in 2014,
  • 00:02:40
    an exhibition I think many of us remember fondly.
  • 00:02:43
    And she contributed to Andrea del Sarto:
  • 00:02:46
    The Renaissance Workshop in Action,
  • 00:02:49
    wonderful exhibition that was here 2015 to 2016.
  • 00:02:54
    In 2017, she organized with Stephen K. Scher,
  • 00:02:59
    The Pursuit of Immortality:
  • 00:03:01
    Masterpieces from the Scher Collection of Portrait Medals
  • 00:03:05
    and has been working for a number of years
  • 00:03:08
    on the catalog of the entire Scher Medals Collection.
  • 00:03:11
    This is a huge set of volumes and undertaking
  • 00:03:15
    much of which is a promise gift to The Frick.
  • 00:03:19
    The catalog we're anxiously awaiting to appear
  • 00:03:21
    later this spring.
  • 00:03:24
    One of her future projects
  • 00:03:26
    is an exhibition titled Bertoldo di Giovanni:
  • 00:03:29
    The Renaissance of Sculpture in Medici Florence
  • 00:03:32
    which she's co-edited with Alexander J. Noelle
  • 00:03:36
    and Xavier Salomon, of our staff
  • 00:03:39
    and that opens this September.
  • 00:03:43
    You can see that Aimee has worked extensively
  • 00:03:47
    in the years that she's been here,
  • 00:03:49
    particularly on renaissance projects.
  • 00:03:51
    And I'm delighted that you're gonna hear from her tonight
  • 00:03:56
    on her latest exhibition.
  • 00:03:59
    Following the lecture you can visit the exhibition,
  • 00:04:03
    which should be open to the public for half an hour
  • 00:04:06
    after the close of this.
  • 00:04:08
    Please silence your cellphones
  • 00:04:11
    and I look forward as I'm sure you do
  • 00:04:13
    to hearing her thoughts on this intriguing
  • 00:04:17
    portraitist Moroni in a lecture titled
  • 00:04:20
    Truth and Fiction in Italian Renaissance Portraiture.
  • 00:04:23
    Aimee.
  • 00:04:24
    (audience applauding)
  • 00:04:34
    - Thank you, Ian
  • 00:04:36
    and thank you for all that you have done to make
  • 00:04:39
    the Moroni exhibition possible.
  • 00:04:42
    Thanks to all of you for braving the cold
  • 00:04:44
    to be here tonight,
  • 00:04:45
    and welcome to those who are tuning in on our webcast
  • 00:04:49
    from around the world.
  • 00:04:51
    The exhibition Moroni: The Riches of Renaissance Portraiture
  • 00:04:56
    is a joyous, pleasurable experience
  • 00:04:59
    in The Frick's galleries.
  • 00:05:01
    But it was only possible through the blood,
  • 00:05:03
    sweat and tears, the hard work
  • 00:05:05
    over a long period of time
  • 00:05:07
    of many, many people within The Frick and without.
  • 00:05:11
    I acknowledge my co-curators Simone Facchinetti
  • 00:05:13
    and Arturo Galansino
  • 00:05:15
    and to name every friend and colleague along the way
  • 00:05:18
    who contributed in some way to this project
  • 00:05:20
    would take the rest of the night.
  • 00:05:22
    Suffice it to say that this exhibition
  • 00:05:24
    and its accompanying catalog
  • 00:05:26
    are the product of an extensive and wonderful community
  • 00:05:30
    for which I'm deeply and humbly grateful.
  • 00:05:36
    Giovanni Battista Moroni,
  • 00:05:38
    he's not well-known in this country
  • 00:05:41
    and since the opening of the exhibition last week
  • 00:05:43
    I'm happy that Moroni has become
  • 00:05:46
    the subject of new conversations
  • 00:05:48
    on topics like his place in the history
  • 00:05:51
    of European portraiture.
  • 00:05:52
    As in was he more influential than previously thought?
  • 00:05:56
    Here for example, Moroni's bearded man
  • 00:05:59
    with a letter from the private collection.
  • 00:06:02
    It's been proposed to have inspired
  • 00:06:04
    Rembrandt's Nicolaes Ruts on view
  • 00:06:07
    in The Frick's west gallery.
  • 00:06:09
    There's no secure evidence for this,
  • 00:06:11
    only suggestive circumstantial evidence
  • 00:06:14
    but it's worth talking about.
  • 00:06:16
    Or the socioeconomics of Moroni's patrons
  • 00:06:20
    with regard to The Tailor,
  • 00:06:21
    and the question of who had access to art in Moroni's world.
  • 00:06:27
    The Tailor which is on loan
  • 00:06:28
    from the National Gallery in London
  • 00:06:30
    which is home to the largest number
  • 00:06:32
    of Moroni's outside of Italy.
  • 00:06:34
    The Tailor is Moroni's most famous painting
  • 00:06:37
    and deservedly so.
  • 00:06:39
    It's extraordinary for its moment in the 16th century
  • 00:06:43
    for its portrayal of a tradesman at work as a gentleman
  • 00:06:47
    as if in stopped action
  • 00:06:49
    with such psychological presence,
  • 00:06:52
    and the topic of artistic genius.
  • 00:06:55
    In the last week it has been asked about Moroni
  • 00:06:58
    who was nowhere near as famous
  • 00:07:01
    as older contemporaries like Titian and Bronzino.
  • 00:07:05
    Did Moroni deserve to be more famous than he was?
  • 00:07:09
    Was Moroni a forgotten genius or just forgotten.
  • 00:07:15
    This is a difficult question to answer
  • 00:07:16
    first of all because in the context of European art history,
  • 00:07:20
    the term genius is a problematic one
  • 00:07:24
    connected as it is to myths
  • 00:07:26
    of the individual artistic genius,
  • 00:07:29
    the implicitly male superlative artist
  • 00:07:32
    who basically emerged fully formed from the womb
  • 00:07:35
    to surpass his contemporaries.
  • 00:07:37
    Such myths can belittle the role of training
  • 00:07:41
    of financial needs and constraints,
  • 00:07:43
    the importance of assistance even
  • 00:07:46
    in creating a work of art.
  • 00:07:48
    So in the myth of Michelangelo is genius for example,
  • 00:07:52
    baby Michelangelo drinks the milk of a wet nurse
  • 00:07:55
    who was a stone cutter's wife
  • 00:07:57
    thus explaining in part his unrivaled talents
  • 00:08:00
    in carving stone.
  • 00:08:03
    For Moroni, a look at his entire known artistic outputs
  • 00:08:08
    suggests that he wasn't always striving
  • 00:08:11
    to demonstrate genius.
  • 00:08:13
    A roughly 200 surviving paintings,
  • 00:08:17
    about 75 are religious works.
  • 00:08:20
    Here's his Madonna and Child
  • 00:08:21
    with the four doctors of the church
  • 00:08:23
    and St. John the Evangelist in Trent, an early work.
  • 00:08:26
    And a late work on the right,
  • 00:08:28
    The Assumption of the Virgin in the Brera, Milan.
  • 00:08:31
    His religious paintings can be somewhat dry
  • 00:08:36
    and they're often derived directly
  • 00:08:38
    from compositions by his teacher, Moretto de Brescia.
  • 00:08:41
    I'm sorry, I probably shouldn't say this
  • 00:08:43
    but I have a hard time telling them all apart.
  • 00:08:47
    Moroni is much better known for good reason I think
  • 00:08:50
    for his portraits of which about
  • 00:08:53
    125 are currently attributed to him today.
  • 00:08:57
    Not all of them are as exciting
  • 00:08:59
    or innovative as the tailor.
  • 00:09:02
    Indeed, many of them aren't.
  • 00:09:04
    He doesn't seem to have ever gone
  • 00:09:06
    to the major artistic centers of his day
  • 00:09:08
    like Venice, Florence or Rome,
  • 00:09:10
    and here are some of the major cities marked on the map.
  • 00:09:13
    Instead, he lived and worked almost exclusiveLy
  • 00:09:16
    in his native, Albino and Bergamo up in the alps
  • 00:09:21
    with short stints in Brescia
  • 00:09:23
    where he trained with Moretto de Brescia,
  • 00:09:25
    and in Trent up near the German border
  • 00:09:28
    during the Catholic council of Trent.
  • 00:09:31
    Who were his patrons in these somewhat regional cities?
  • 00:09:36
    If you flip through Mina Gregori's
  • 00:09:37
    1979 catalog Rasone of Moroni's Works
  • 00:09:40
    which is still the authoritative source,
  • 00:09:43
    you'll see numerous portraits of the local bourgeoisie
  • 00:09:46
    that must have been his bread and butter.
  • 00:09:48
    That must have paid his bills.
  • 00:09:50
    Lots of portraits of white men in black
  • 00:09:53
    in similar formats,
  • 00:09:54
    here's another page.
  • 00:09:56
    Individually they're not bad portraits,
  • 00:09:58
    many presenting highly individualized features
  • 00:10:01
    with psychological presence,
  • 00:10:04
    but the formula is evident.
  • 00:10:06
    Moroni responded to the demands of his market
  • 00:10:10
    just as most if not all early modern artists did.
  • 00:10:15
    What opportunities to express genius
  • 00:10:18
    were available to someone like Moroni
  • 00:10:21
    outside of the big cities and the big patrons,
  • 00:10:24
    someone who was clearly kept busy
  • 00:10:26
    painting the local middle class?
  • 00:10:29
    Should an artist be evaluated for signs of genius
  • 00:10:31
    according to one extraordinary work?
  • 00:10:35
    Or should he be judged on the entirety
  • 00:10:38
    of his artistic output?
  • 00:10:41
    Every so often when he had the chance,
  • 00:10:44
    a slightly more prominent patron
  • 00:10:45
    or someone looking for something
  • 00:10:47
    a little more interesting,
  • 00:10:49
    Moroni produced something spectacular.
  • 00:10:54
    My talk tonight explores some of these moments
  • 00:10:57
    that reveal a much more interesting artist
  • 00:11:00
    than his many men in black might suggest.
  • 00:11:04
    To tell the story of Moroni,
  • 00:11:06
    one kind of has to go back to the beginning
  • 00:11:08
    or at least to one beginning.
  • 00:11:10
    In one origin story of the invention of portraiture
  • 00:11:14
    told by the ancient Roman writer Pliny the Elder,
  • 00:11:17
    one of the first portraits was the result
  • 00:11:20
    of a woman's impulse.
  • 00:11:22
    Yay.
  • 00:11:24
    Pliny's myth was particularly popular
  • 00:11:26
    among 18th century artists
  • 00:11:27
    hence I'm showing you here a painting by
  • 00:11:29
    Joseph Wright of Derby
  • 00:11:30
    in the National Gallery of Art Washington.
  • 00:11:32
    Pliny recounts that a young woman,
  • 00:11:35
    the daughter of the potter, Butades of Sicyon in Corinth,
  • 00:11:39
    Pliny never actually gives her a name
  • 00:11:41
    and this painting is called The Corinthian Maid,
  • 00:11:43
    but her name was Cora.
  • 00:11:45
    The young woman, Cora, was in love with a young man
  • 00:11:49
    who was about to depart on a long journey.
  • 00:11:51
    And of course in those days
  • 00:11:52
    one was never really sure
  • 00:11:54
    if one would make it back from a long journey.
  • 00:11:57
    Before the young man leaves,
  • 00:11:59
    she traces the outline of his shadow
  • 00:12:02
    as it's cast against a wall.
  • 00:12:04
    And this outline her father fills in with clay.
  • 00:12:07
    And Pliny's story is actually about the woman's father
  • 00:12:10
    inventing the first known relief portrait.
  • 00:12:13
    He isn't actually crediting the daughter with anything
  • 00:12:15
    but in fact it was she who acting on the urge
  • 00:12:19
    to capture her lover's appearance
  • 00:12:21
    to leave a trace of him to look at when he was gone.
  • 00:12:25
    It was she who drew the first portrait.
  • 00:12:30
    Why this guy fell asleep during their farewell,
  • 00:12:32
    I have no idea.
  • 00:12:33
    (audience laughing)
  • 00:12:34
    In David Allan's version
  • 00:12:37
    in the National Galleries of Scotland
  • 00:12:38
    he's a little bit livelier.
  • 00:12:40
    (audience laughing)
  • 00:12:41
    This was one significant aspect
  • 00:12:44
    of Italian renaissance portraiture,
  • 00:12:45
    the impulse to imitate someone's appearance so closely
  • 00:12:50
    that the painting or sculpture
  • 00:12:51
    seems to capture the person exactly as he or she looked,
  • 00:12:56
    to make he who is absent seem to be present.
  • 00:13:00
    Recording appearances precisely
  • 00:13:02
    was certainly not the only aim of portraiture
  • 00:13:05
    which was of course a vehicle to shape,
  • 00:13:07
    embellish, even invent one's identity.
  • 00:13:11
    But praise for portraiture in the Italian renaissance
  • 00:13:14
    often took the form of saying
  • 00:13:16
    that the portrait lacked only breath,
  • 00:13:19
    that it was so convincing alikeness of the person
  • 00:13:22
    that it just needed the breath of life
  • 00:13:23
    and it might walk right out of its frame.
  • 00:13:27
    And I'm showing you Raphael's portrait
  • 00:13:28
    of Baldassare Castiglione from the Louvre
  • 00:13:31
    as a famous example of how portraits serve
  • 00:13:34
    to make someone who is absent seem present.
  • 00:13:37
    Castiglione the sitter and a poem,
  • 00:13:39
    a well-known poem about the portrait
  • 00:13:42
    suggest that Raphael painted it so well,
  • 00:13:44
    the likeness was so effective
  • 00:13:47
    that when Castiglione was away from home
  • 00:13:49
    his wife and young sons spoke to the painting
  • 00:13:52
    nearly expecting it to respond.
  • 00:13:56
    I just wanna underline something
  • 00:13:57
    that's very well-recognized by now
  • 00:13:59
    but it's very hard to fully appreciate
  • 00:14:01
    the value, presence, function, pleasure
  • 00:14:05
    of a painted portrait in the renaissance
  • 00:14:07
    in our present day context of so many photos
  • 00:14:10
    of our loved ones on our phones, literally thousands.
  • 00:14:15
    It can be hard to imagine a time in which
  • 00:14:17
    most people never had a single portrait painted
  • 00:14:19
    of themselves made in any medium,
  • 00:14:21
    and those with the wealth and means to do so
  • 00:14:24
    may have only had one portrait made of them
  • 00:14:26
    in their entire lives.
  • 00:14:28
    Back to the renaissance.
  • 00:14:30
    The praise that a portrait is so life-like
  • 00:14:32
    that it lacks only breath was applied also to portraits
  • 00:14:37
    that appear to modern eyes more overtly stylized
  • 00:14:41
    like those of Bronzino
  • 00:14:42
    and here's The Frick's Bronzino portrait
  • 00:14:45
    of Lodovico Capponi
  • 00:14:47
    and perhaps Bronzino's most famous and most copied,
  • 00:14:50
    Eleonora di Toledo in the Uffizi Galleries.
  • 00:14:54
    In Bronzino's portraits,
  • 00:14:56
    his sitters probably looked something
  • 00:14:58
    like what he painted
  • 00:14:59
    but they also seem to have been transformed
  • 00:15:02
    into enchantingly beautiful ivory creatures
  • 00:15:05
    with impossibly long hands.
  • 00:15:08
    But Bronzino's portraits could still be
  • 00:15:11
    and were praised in the same way,
  • 00:15:14
    celebrated for life likeness to lack only breath.
  • 00:15:18
    Because portraits were meant
  • 00:15:20
    to have both likeness and art.
  • 00:15:23
    Editing, selecting, adherence to ideals of beauty,
  • 00:15:27
    portraits should present a sitter's best self
  • 00:15:31
    even a better self.
  • 00:15:33
    Meanwhile in the portraiture of Michelangelo
  • 00:15:36
    invention prevailed over likeness.
  • 00:15:39
    When Michelangelo's sculptures of Lorenzo
  • 00:15:42
    and Giuliano de' Medici were criticized
  • 00:15:44
    for not resembling them in real life,
  • 00:15:47
    the sculptor reportedly responded that
  • 00:15:49
    in a thousand years no one would know
  • 00:15:51
    that the real Lorenzo and Giuliano didn't look like this.
  • 00:15:55
    The images he invented of them, however, would endure
  • 00:15:59
    and they certainly have.
  • 00:16:01
    Moroni's portraits have long been characterized
  • 00:16:04
    by scholars, by this,
  • 00:16:05
    by their apparent faithfulness to their models.
  • 00:16:09
    And here is Moroni's Gabriele Albani
  • 00:16:11
    from a private collection
  • 00:16:12
    which you can see next door in the east gallery.
  • 00:16:15
    Yes, that is a lump on his forehead.
  • 00:16:18
    No, it has not been securely diagnosed.
  • 00:16:21
    (audience laughing)
  • 00:16:22
    Moroni's naturalism has been seen
  • 00:16:24
    both negatively and positively.
  • 00:16:27
    Negatively, in the early 20th century
  • 00:16:29
    the American art historian Bernard Berenson condemned Moroni
  • 00:16:34
    as the only mirror portrait painter
  • 00:16:36
    that Italy ever produced,
  • 00:16:38
    calling him uninventive,
  • 00:16:40
    that he gives us sitters no doubt as they looked.
  • 00:16:44
    Berenson is recalling an old criticism,
  • 00:16:47
    one that goes way back to Ancient Greece and Rome,
  • 00:16:49
    an artist should not copy his models too slavishly.
  • 00:16:53
    Again, there should be some art.
  • 00:16:56
    And a similar debate continues in contemporary art,
  • 00:16:59
    I've seen art students, professional artists
  • 00:17:01
    criticized for producing what's sometimes called
  • 00:17:03
    photorealistic paintings.
  • 00:17:05
    The argument goes, where is the art in that?
  • 00:17:09
    What is there besides superficial technical ability
  • 00:17:12
    to do what a camera could do in a fraction of a second?
  • 00:17:16
    And it's true that Moroni gives the impression
  • 00:17:19
    especially in his comparatively few portraits of women.
  • 00:17:23
    So out of about 125 portraits,
  • 00:17:25
    only about 15 depict women.
  • 00:17:28
    This one, the portrait of a woman
  • 00:17:29
    is in a private collection.
  • 00:17:31
    He does not seem to have idealized his women.
  • 00:17:35
    Here for example in Lucrezia Agliardi Vertova
  • 00:17:38
    from The Metropolitan Museum of Art
  • 00:17:40
    her wrinkled skin, sagging neck with a goiter
  • 00:17:45
    yet she's still presented with dignity,
  • 00:17:48
    all of Moroni's sitters are.
  • 00:17:50
    Moroni's women have not be treated very well
  • 00:17:53
    by art historians.
  • 00:17:54
    Regarding this bust portrait of Isotta Brembati
  • 00:17:58
    for example from Accademia Carrara in Bergamo.
  • 00:18:00
    In the 19th century, Jacob Burckhardt referred to her
  • 00:18:04
    evidently provincial beauty.
  • 00:18:07
    And Otto Mundler, the traveling agent
  • 00:18:09
    for the National Gallery in London in the mid-19th century
  • 00:18:12
    derided her flat nose and thick lips.
  • 00:18:17
    One senses a darker undertone too Mundler's comments.
  • 00:18:21
    These responses, albeit of the 19th century,
  • 00:18:24
    stand in stark contrast to these sometimes
  • 00:18:26
    extravagant responses to Moroni's men.
  • 00:18:31
    I have heard from more people than I care to count
  • 00:18:33
    that Moroni's tailor is their art historical boyfriend.
  • 00:18:37
    (audience laughing)
  • 00:18:39
    And then there was the kind of amazing review
  • 00:18:42
    of the Moroni show in London five years ago
  • 00:18:44
    by the journalist Jonathan Jones.
  • 00:18:47
    "Moroni loves men," he wrote.
  • 00:18:49
    "He loves their beards, their swords,
  • 00:18:51
    "their finely hosed legs.
  • 00:18:53
    "His portraits of men are erotically charged
  • 00:18:55
    "in a way his pictures of women are not.
  • 00:18:58
    "Moroni paints men with such emotional depth
  • 00:19:01
    "because he's in love with them."
  • 00:19:03
    End quote.
  • 00:19:05
    I don't know yet that I've figured out
  • 00:19:07
    Moroni's women and his men.
  • 00:19:09
    I don't think he painted women the way he did
  • 00:19:11
    because he didn't like them.
  • 00:19:14
    Whatever modern responses may be,
  • 00:19:17
    Moroni's portraits of women like Lucrezia and Isotta
  • 00:19:22
    seem to have been valued by their patrons and owners.
  • 00:19:25
    The portrait of Lucrezia on the left for example
  • 00:19:28
    remained installed in the Convent of Sant'Anna
  • 00:19:30
    for which it was commissioned
  • 00:19:32
    until the late 18th century in Albino.
  • 00:19:35
    And the portrait of Isotta on the right
  • 00:19:37
    which also remained in that family for centuries
  • 00:19:40
    seems to have won Moroni commissions
  • 00:19:42
    for portraits of other members of her family,
  • 00:19:45
    and probably led to his painting
  • 00:19:47
    of the full length portrait of her a few years later.
  • 00:19:51
    Was the lack of obvious idealization
  • 00:19:55
    valued as a respect for their women's appearance?
  • 00:19:59
    I'd like to think so but one can't be sure.
  • 00:20:03
    And modern art historians have put a positive spin
  • 00:20:05
    on what Berenson saw as Moroni's uninventive,
  • 00:20:08
    slavish copying.
  • 00:20:10
    In response to Berenson, the Italian art historian
  • 00:20:13
    Roberto Longhi in the 1950s
  • 00:20:15
    celebrated Moroni's documents of society
  • 00:20:18
    that are unmediated by style
  • 00:20:21
    as if the portraits are sort of ethnographic record
  • 00:20:24
    of Moroni's society.
  • 00:20:26
    And Longhi put Moroni at the head
  • 00:20:27
    of a tradition of Lombard naturalism
  • 00:20:30
    that anticipated Caravaggio.
  • 00:20:33
    And since the 1950s scholarship has continued
  • 00:20:35
    to uphold this positive spin,
  • 00:20:37
    Moroni celebrated, defined by his naturalism.
  • 00:20:43
    I argue that there's more to Moroni than this,
  • 00:20:47
    that naturalism itself is something to probe
  • 00:20:50
    and play with in Moroni's art.
  • 00:20:53
    The Riches of Renaissance Portraiture
  • 00:20:55
    and the title of our exhibition
  • 00:20:56
    is obviously about much more than the lavish
  • 00:20:59
    and opulent objects we brought together with the paintings.
  • 00:21:02
    It refers also to the portraits themselves,
  • 00:21:05
    the fictions, inventions and liberties
  • 00:21:08
    that belie Moroni's illusions
  • 00:21:10
    of having simply recorded reality.
  • 00:21:14
    Right off the bat, in the context
  • 00:21:16
    of early modern portraiture,
  • 00:21:17
    the very concept of likeness to a model
  • 00:21:21
    should itself be questioned.
  • 00:21:23
    And to give you something to think about,
  • 00:21:25
    since the 19th century these two portraits
  • 00:21:28
    have been believed to depict the same person,
  • 00:21:30
    Isotta Brembati five years apart
  • 00:21:33
    and the younger one is on the right.
  • 00:21:36
    And for good historical reasons
  • 00:21:38
    as they were in Isotta's family collection
  • 00:21:40
    for centuries together.
  • 00:21:42
    Recently, this portrait was proposed
  • 00:21:44
    to be a third portrait of Isotta 20 years later
  • 00:21:49
    without external evidence.
  • 00:21:51
    And so far, it's not an identification
  • 00:21:53
    that's widely supported by scholars
  • 00:21:55
    But still have a look
  • 00:21:57
    and all three are in the exhibition.
  • 00:22:00
    In the context of early modern portraiture,
  • 00:22:03
    the very concept of likeness to a model
  • 00:22:06
    should be questioned.
  • 00:22:08
    In a sense, the ways that Moroni's portraits
  • 00:22:11
    have been described in art historical literature
  • 00:22:13
    as documents without stylistic mediation
  • 00:22:17
    presenting physical truth.
  • 00:22:19
    These words suggest that the appearances
  • 00:22:22
    of 16th century people can be known definitively.
  • 00:22:27
    But with the possible exception of life masks
  • 00:22:30
    and death masks, this is simply not true.
  • 00:22:33
    No matter how many portraits of a person exists
  • 00:22:36
    from the 16th century
  • 00:22:37
    we can never be absolutely sure
  • 00:22:39
    that we know exactly what he or she looked like.
  • 00:22:41
    Every portrait we have from the renaissance
  • 00:22:43
    has been mediated by an artist in some way
  • 00:22:46
    no matter how subtly.
  • 00:22:48
    And I don't wanna belabor the point
  • 00:22:50
    but just to give an obvious example,
  • 00:22:51
    maybe an exaggerated example,
  • 00:22:53
    of the same person painted by two different artists
  • 00:22:56
    around the very same time,
  • 00:22:57
    here's the Emperor Charles V in 1533
  • 00:23:00
    painted by Titian in the Prado
  • 00:23:03
    and the same Charles V painted by
  • 00:23:05
    Lucas Cranach The Elder on the right also in 1533
  • 00:23:09
    at the Thyssen also in Madrid,
  • 00:23:11
    each is mediated by the artist in their own way.
  • 00:23:15
    In Moroni's portraits, the effect of having studied
  • 00:23:18
    someone directly from life
  • 00:23:19
    can be so convincing that it's easy to forget
  • 00:23:22
    that each portrait is constructed
  • 00:23:24
    through a series of artistic decisions.
  • 00:23:26
    And the same issues have been addressed years ago
  • 00:23:29
    by scholars in the work of Northern European artist
  • 00:23:32
    like Jan van Eyck.
  • 00:23:34
    And there are several connections to make
  • 00:23:35
    between Moroni and artists of the north.
  • 00:23:38
    Writing about the Arnolfini portrait for example
  • 00:23:41
    in the National Gallery in London,
  • 00:23:42
    the artist historian Lorne Campbell
  • 00:23:44
    could have been referring to Moroni when he wrote, quote,
  • 00:23:47
    "It's very easy to fall into the error
  • 00:23:50
    "of thinking that van Eyck or Moroni
  • 00:23:53
    "recorded with impassive objectivity all that he saw
  • 00:23:57
    "to take his image too literally,
  • 00:23:59
    "to treat it as if it were a photographic record
  • 00:24:01
    "of a single instance."
  • 00:24:03
    And referring specifically to the couple, he writes,
  • 00:24:06
    "The couple are distorted and idealized,
  • 00:24:08
    "the room is an imagined space,
  • 00:24:10
    "the objects are arranged with marvelous artifice."
  • 00:24:13
    End quote.
  • 00:24:15
    And just because some of Moroni's women by the way
  • 00:24:18
    are not particularly beautiful
  • 00:24:20
    according to prevailing standards of beauty,
  • 00:24:23
    it still does not necessarily mean
  • 00:24:24
    that they looked exactly like this.
  • 00:24:27
    Indeed, these may well be idealized
  • 00:24:30
    depictions of them.
  • 00:24:32
    Yes, Moroni's observations of light and shadow,
  • 00:24:35
    on flesh and fabric, the precise features of the face,
  • 00:24:38
    these aspects may have only been possible
  • 00:24:40
    through direct study of his sitters.
  • 00:24:43
    But that's just one aspect of a complex of factors
  • 00:24:46
    that make up a portrait.
  • 00:24:49
    There is any number of fictions
  • 00:24:51
    in his and in any renaissance portrait.
  • 00:24:54
    For example, like many 16th century artists,
  • 00:24:57
    Moroni probably used mannequins or stand-in models
  • 00:25:00
    to study carefully the intricacies of clothes.
  • 00:25:03
    So the body is wearing the clothes
  • 00:25:05
    and Moroni's portraits may not necessarily
  • 00:25:07
    be those of the sitter.
  • 00:25:09
    And a number of scholars have noted that
  • 00:25:10
    some of Moroni's heads are slightly too large
  • 00:25:13
    or slightly misaligned with their bodies like here
  • 00:25:17
    in Gabriel de la Cueva on loan
  • 00:25:19
    from the Grimaldi Gallery in Berlin.
  • 00:25:21
    This suggests that Moroni painted the heads
  • 00:25:23
    independently from the rest of the portrait
  • 00:25:25
    which may have been completed in various phases.
  • 00:25:29
    The fact that a number of Moroni's sitters
  • 00:25:31
    bear a very similar pose,
  • 00:25:33
    here for example a portrait
  • 00:25:34
    that's not in the exhibition on the right,
  • 00:25:37
    Girolamo Virtova from a private collection
  • 00:25:39
    has a similar pose to Gabriel de la Cueva,
  • 00:25:42
    and shows that Moroni retained a few formulas
  • 00:25:45
    for composing his portraits.
  • 00:25:48
    Some of the hands in Moroni's portraits
  • 00:25:50
    don't exactly match faces.
  • 00:25:53
    Particularly in depictions of older sitters
  • 00:25:55
    in which significant attention is paid to
  • 00:25:57
    articulating the wrinkles of the face
  • 00:26:00
    as in Lucrezia on the left
  • 00:26:01
    or Giovanni Bressani on the right.
  • 00:26:04
    In both it seems that the hands
  • 00:26:06
    of a younger model were used,
  • 00:26:09
    or at least there's no indication
  • 00:26:10
    that the hands are of the same age
  • 00:26:11
    and expected appearance as the faces.
  • 00:26:14
    And then there are the backgrounds,
  • 00:26:16
    sometimes ambiguous, partly indoor, partly outdoor spaces
  • 00:26:20
    that seem to be allegorical in the way they portray
  • 00:26:23
    through sprouting vegetations,
  • 00:26:25
    streaks of moisture, a sense of age, decay,
  • 00:26:29
    the passing of time.
  • 00:26:30
    And I won't say anymore of the backgrounds
  • 00:26:32
    in Moroni's portraits because
  • 00:26:34
    Professor David Kim will be giving a lecture
  • 00:26:36
    on this topic on May 8th
  • 00:26:38
    and you won't want to miss that.
  • 00:26:41
    Moroni was not merely a documentarian
  • 00:26:43
    and even if he did not revolutionize
  • 00:26:46
    the entire trajectory of Italian art,
  • 00:26:48
    so in addition to being geographically limited,
  • 00:26:50
    he did not have an extensive studio
  • 00:26:52
    or significant pupils.
  • 00:26:54
    He still innovated portraiture in several ways.
  • 00:26:57
    Besides The Tailor and its revolutionary depiction
  • 00:27:01
    of a man at work,
  • 00:27:02
    his Pace Rivola Spini from the Accademia Carrara
  • 00:27:06
    is a pendant to the portrait of her husband, Bernardo Spini,
  • 00:27:10
    but as she occupies her own canvas on her own
  • 00:27:14
    and stands fully upright
  • 00:27:15
    at the same height as her husband,
  • 00:27:18
    she's also the earliest known
  • 00:27:20
    independent full length portrait
  • 00:27:22
    of a standing woman of the Italian renaissance.
  • 00:27:26
    This full length format was generally reserved
  • 00:27:28
    for European men in the highest positions of power.
  • 00:27:32
    Who decided that this noble woman
  • 00:27:34
    from the outskirts of Bergamo
  • 00:27:36
    should be portrayed in this way,
  • 00:27:38
    the visual equal to her husband?
  • 00:27:41
    Her?
  • 00:27:42
    The artist?
  • 00:27:43
    Her husband?
  • 00:27:44
    I've wondered if Moroni and his sitters
  • 00:27:47
    away from the expectations and regulations
  • 00:27:50
    of the major cities like Venice, Florence and Rome,
  • 00:27:53
    if they enjoyed relative freedom
  • 00:27:55
    to break with expected social hierarchies and norms.
  • 00:28:00
    We unite for the first time in our exhibition
  • 00:28:03
    Moroni's three surviving so-called sacred portraits.
  • 00:28:06
    This is a genre that Moroni invented.
  • 00:28:09
    It's obviously derived from the long tradition
  • 00:28:11
    of donor portraits but here,
  • 00:28:13
    the contemporary sitter is the primary subject
  • 00:28:17
    shown praying before sacred figures
  • 00:28:19
    painted at a scale that suggests
  • 00:28:21
    these paintings were meant for domestic setting
  • 00:28:23
    rather than a church.
  • 00:28:24
    And these two are on loan from the
  • 00:28:26
    Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond on the left
  • 00:28:29
    and on the right from a private collection.
  • 00:28:31
    The third is from the National Gallery of Art in Washington.
  • 00:28:35
    The sacred portraits are kind of jarring
  • 00:28:38
    and their contrast in style
  • 00:28:39
    between the portraits which like his other portraits
  • 00:28:42
    appear to have been studied from life,
  • 00:28:43
    and the religious figures which relate to
  • 00:28:46
    or derive from other known works of art.
  • 00:28:50
    The Virgin and Child for example in this sacred portrait
  • 00:28:54
    are modeled from a print by Albrecht Durer
  • 00:28:57
    and I'm not showing the painting and print
  • 00:28:59
    in proportion here,
  • 00:29:00
    you'll see in the gallery the significant disparity in size
  • 00:29:03
    and Moroni used a very small print
  • 00:29:06
    made for personal devotion as a model
  • 00:29:08
    for an almost monumental set of figures.
  • 00:29:11
    Perhaps the unknown sitter owned
  • 00:29:13
    an impression of the Durer print
  • 00:29:15
    or maybe Moroni did.
  • 00:29:17
    All of these examples are treated extensively
  • 00:29:19
    in the catalog that accompanies the exhibition.
  • 00:29:23
    But I'd like to draw attention
  • 00:29:24
    to some of the more subtle liberties
  • 00:29:27
    Moroni took in his portraits
  • 00:29:28
    including in his most celebrated works
  • 00:29:31
    that have escaped unnoticed until now.
  • 00:29:34
    And the objects in the exhibition help us
  • 00:29:36
    make these moments of invention and license
  • 00:29:39
    a little clearer.
  • 00:29:41
    As you know, we've included in the exhibition
  • 00:29:44
    a number of objects that represent types of things
  • 00:29:47
    that appear in Moroni's portraits.
  • 00:29:49
    On the right, shown along side the portrait of a young woman
  • 00:29:51
    wearing a pink brocade dress,
  • 00:29:53
    we have an example of 16th century brocade
  • 00:29:56
    in blue from The Metropolitan Museum.
  • 00:29:58
    For an artist best known for his naturalism,
  • 00:30:01
    for his convincing illusion of having captured reality,
  • 00:30:04
    what was he looking at?
  • 00:30:06
    Obviously we can't know what his sitters really looked like
  • 00:30:09
    but bringing together his paintings
  • 00:30:11
    with related renaissance objects
  • 00:30:13
    offers a chance to better understand him as a painter.
  • 00:30:16
    How he translated the world around him
  • 00:30:18
    into strokes of paint.
  • 00:30:20
    So in his portrait of a young woman,
  • 00:30:22
    he articulates her pink silk brocade dress
  • 00:30:25
    with little jots of yellow and white,
  • 00:30:28
    and the detail on the right is taken
  • 00:30:29
    from the left side of her dress
  • 00:30:31
    to represent the reflection of light on the surface.
  • 00:30:35
    But to really grasp what he's done here,
  • 00:30:38
    how he's translated the appearance
  • 00:30:39
    of an actual fabric into quick strokes,
  • 00:30:42
    short-handed strokes of paint,
  • 00:30:44
    it takes understanding what renaissance brocade
  • 00:30:46
    really looked like.
  • 00:30:48
    Now I'm guilty for thinking
  • 00:30:50
    that I thought I knew what brocade looked like.
  • 00:30:52
    And yes, I knew it was gold and silver shiny patterns
  • 00:30:55
    woven into a textile
  • 00:30:58
    but I didn't fully get it
  • 00:30:59
    until I looked really closely at an actual piece
  • 00:31:02
    of renaissance brocade.
  • 00:31:03
    And I hope many of our visitors
  • 00:31:05
    have the same kind of revelation.
  • 00:31:09
    The example in the exhibition
  • 00:31:11
    which is obviously not from the sitter's dress
  • 00:31:12
    but is an example of the same weaving technique,
  • 00:31:15
    was probably more vibrantly blue in the renaissance
  • 00:31:18
    and it is actually two joined fabrics,
  • 00:31:20
    the seam runs across the middle.
  • 00:31:23
    And as we get closer
  • 00:31:25
    and this detail is taken from the point
  • 00:31:27
    indicated by the arrow,
  • 00:31:28
    you'll see what creates the brocade effect.
  • 00:31:30
    It's made from extremely thin strips of precious metal,
  • 00:31:34
    let's go a little bit closer.
  • 00:31:36
    The detail on the left is taken of the green square.
  • 00:31:39
    Metal strips that are wound by hand around silk thread
  • 00:31:45
    then woven into the textile into loops
  • 00:31:47
    to create the brocade effect.
  • 00:31:50
    So looking at the paining alone,
  • 00:31:52
    here again is the detail of the painting,
  • 00:31:53
    Moroni's painted brocade.
  • 00:31:55
    The fabric seems vaguely luxurious and expensive
  • 00:31:58
    made up of jots of paint
  • 00:31:59
    but having an actual textile in the gallery
  • 00:32:03
    drives home just how shorthand,
  • 00:32:04
    how painterly Moroni's portrayal is,
  • 00:32:08
    and how opulent these fabrics were.
  • 00:32:10
    Imagine how heavy wearing a dress
  • 00:32:13
    brocaded like this would be
  • 00:32:15
    where so much metal hanging off the fabric.
  • 00:32:18
    The microscopic view by the way
  • 00:32:19
    was taken with the aid of our colleagues
  • 00:32:21
    in the Textile Conservation Studio at The Met.
  • 00:32:23
    So I was completely shocked
  • 00:32:25
    at the incredibly time-consuming
  • 00:32:27
    and labor-intensive task of hand winding
  • 00:32:29
    metal around silk thread enough to make an entire dress.
  • 00:32:33
    When I expressed this to one
  • 00:32:35
    of the conservators, Cristina Carr,
  • 00:32:37
    she looked at me and said,
  • 00:32:39
    "There's a reason there was a revolution."
  • 00:32:41
    (audience laughing)
  • 00:32:43
    Fair enough.
  • 00:32:44
    Seeing Moroni's painterly translation
  • 00:32:47
    of brocade into dabs of paint
  • 00:32:49
    allows us also to see various modes of painting at work
  • 00:32:52
    in a single portrait.
  • 00:32:54
    For example, meticulous detail on the face,
  • 00:32:57
    a special thank you to Shawn Digney-Peer
  • 00:33:00
    and our colleagues in The Met's
  • 00:33:01
    Department of Paintings Conservation for the Discovery
  • 00:33:04
    made during preparation for this exhibition.
  • 00:33:07
    Here's the title of the area below the lower lip
  • 00:33:10
    of tiny incisions into a wet paint layer.
  • 00:33:14
    Possibly made with the back of a paintbrush
  • 00:33:16
    that manipulate the paint in ways
  • 00:33:19
    that produce extraordinarily subtle transitions
  • 00:33:22
    between features.
  • 00:33:25
    Below the tightly painted lays the dress
  • 00:33:27
    is more loosely articulated
  • 00:33:29
    and then the necklace which appears
  • 00:33:31
    highly detailed from a distance
  • 00:33:34
    upon close inspection seems almost
  • 00:33:36
    to dissolve into abstract dabs of paint.
  • 00:33:40
    There's a lot more going on in this painting
  • 00:33:42
    than a record of reality.
  • 00:33:46
    The objects in the exhibition also help us
  • 00:33:49
    to draw attention to objects in the paintings
  • 00:33:52
    that one might not see at first or not understand.
  • 00:33:54
    So here again is Moroni's Isotta Brembati,
  • 00:33:56
    a noble woman of Bergamo.
  • 00:33:58
    Many people think she's holding a fluffy
  • 00:34:00
    pink and white purse.
  • 00:34:03
    But in her hand is a feather fan
  • 00:34:07
    with a gold or gilt bronze handle.
  • 00:34:10
    So we display alongside the portrait
  • 00:34:12
    what may be the last surviving
  • 00:34:15
    gilt bronze fan handle of the renaissance
  • 00:34:18
    from the V and A in London
  • 00:34:19
    and fans became a staple of renaissance women,
  • 00:34:22
    elite renaissance women's accessories
  • 00:34:24
    and her happens to be particularly spectacular.
  • 00:34:27
    And in our exhibition we imitate Isotta's fan
  • 00:34:32
    by mounting the V and A's fan handle
  • 00:34:34
    with a modern, as in made in 2019,
  • 00:34:37
    pink and white feather component.
  • 00:34:40
    And the feather component is the work
  • 00:34:41
    of The Frick's associate conservator Julia Day.
  • 00:34:45
    Now I don't know how you will feel
  • 00:34:46
    about pink and white feathers
  • 00:34:48
    but I hope you'll agree that it's important
  • 00:34:50
    to contextualize the handle
  • 00:34:52
    which would never have been seen
  • 00:34:53
    in the renaissance denuded of its feathers.
  • 00:34:57
    By the way they are marabou feathers
  • 00:34:58
    which today usually means turkey,
  • 00:35:01
    the downy under tail which has the furry feel.
  • 00:35:04
    Yes, you can order them online.
  • 00:35:06
    (audience laughing)
  • 00:35:08
    We display alongside Isotta a pendant cross
  • 00:35:12
    of emeralds and pearls similar
  • 00:35:14
    to the one in the painting.
  • 00:35:16
    Which in the painting it's four rubies
  • 00:35:18
    around a single emerald.
  • 00:35:20
    The jewel and this type was popular in Spain
  • 00:35:23
    and among associates of the Spanish court
  • 00:35:25
    like Isotta Brembati was.
  • 00:35:26
    The example on the right is on loan
  • 00:35:28
    from the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore
  • 00:35:30
    and its profusion of emeralds,
  • 00:35:32
    11 large stones suggests that it might have been made
  • 00:35:36
    after the Spanish colonized Colombia in the late 1550s
  • 00:35:41
    just after Isotta's portrait was painted,
  • 00:35:45
    and Colombia is still well-known for its emeralds.
  • 00:35:49
    Spain took over the rich Colombian emerald mines
  • 00:35:51
    to export huge quantities into Europe and Asia
  • 00:35:55
    and it raises the question of where Isotta's
  • 00:35:57
    jeweler sourced his stones from.
  • 00:35:59
    Was the composition of stones selected by preference
  • 00:36:02
    four rubies and an emerald,
  • 00:36:04
    or is there only one emerald in her cross
  • 00:36:06
    because they were relatively more difficult to acquire,
  • 00:36:10
    sourced from the exhausted Asian mines
  • 00:36:13
    before the Colombian mines were taken over by Spain.
  • 00:36:17
    Most people don't notice when they look at the portrait
  • 00:36:20
    because it doesn't stand out very much
  • 00:36:22
    but around her neck
  • 00:36:24
    she's wearing a marten fur,
  • 00:36:27
    an animal of the weasel family.
  • 00:36:29
    With a gold and enameled jeweled head,
  • 00:36:32
    pearl earrings hanging from its ears.
  • 00:36:35
    Just one jeweled marten head in gold
  • 00:36:39
    and precious stones survived from the renaissance
  • 00:36:42
    and these kinds of objects were often melted down
  • 00:36:44
    and reconstituted in new jewelry
  • 00:36:47
    according to changing tastes and fashions
  • 00:36:49
    and when money was needed.
  • 00:36:52
    This comes to us also on loan from the Walters Art Museum.
  • 00:36:55
    What were these things?
  • 00:36:57
    And at the top there's a view of the Walters
  • 00:37:00
    marten head jewel attached to a modern pelt,
  • 00:37:03
    a modern fur, like the fan.
  • 00:37:04
    I think it's important to contextualize
  • 00:37:06
    the jewel mounted on an animal pelt,
  • 00:37:08
    and this is how the object is displayed
  • 00:37:10
    permanently at the Walters.
  • 00:37:13
    For those of you who've never encountered
  • 00:37:15
    a marten fur before,
  • 00:37:17
    I've explained in the past
  • 00:37:18
    that they're sort of like pets
  • 00:37:20
    that keep you warm but are dead.
  • 00:37:23
    (audience laughing)
  • 00:37:24
    But they are more complex than that.
  • 00:37:26
    First and foremost, they were a symbol of luxury and wealth
  • 00:37:30
    and they became very popular among
  • 00:37:32
    wealthy Italian renaissance women
  • 00:37:33
    from the late 15th century through the 16th century.
  • 00:37:36
    Symbolically they're associated
  • 00:37:38
    with chastity and childbirth.
  • 00:37:40
    Indeed in the renaissance,
  • 00:37:42
    chastity and childbirth were not mutually exclusive.
  • 00:37:45
    And since the 19th century, scholars have also believed
  • 00:37:49
    that they functioned as flea pelts,
  • 00:37:52
    purportedly to attract fleas off of the human
  • 00:37:56
    and onto the pelt.
  • 00:37:58
    Now this theory is widely accepted
  • 00:38:00
    though it's been seriously questioned.
  • 00:38:02
    Like why would a flea want to leave
  • 00:38:04
    the flesh of a warm human
  • 00:38:06
    for a cold, dead animal?
  • 00:38:08
    In any case, the fur part was as valuable in the renaissance
  • 00:38:12
    as was the jeweled head.
  • 00:38:14
    Some renaissance women carried just the pelts
  • 00:38:17
    and this is a portrait of Isotta Brembati's aunt,
  • 00:38:20
    Lucina Brembati painted by Lorenzo Lotto
  • 00:38:23
    in the Accademia Carrara in Bergamo
  • 00:38:25
    in which the pelt is carried by a collar around its neck.
  • 00:38:31
    It's through looking at rare objects like this
  • 00:38:34
    that the viewer can appreciate the material
  • 00:38:36
    reality of these things,
  • 00:38:37
    the technical challenges they pose for the painter
  • 00:38:40
    and how incredibly lavish such objects were,
  • 00:38:43
    many of them being works of art in themselves.
  • 00:38:46
    The gold head is a sheet of gold,
  • 00:38:49
    hammered nearly paper thin,
  • 00:38:51
    enameled and gilded, in some places
  • 00:38:54
    gilded on top of the enamel,
  • 00:38:55
    for example on the big white bird above the nose.
  • 00:38:59
    And its tooled to simulate the texture of fur,
  • 00:39:01
    mount with garnets, seed pearls and a large ruby.
  • 00:39:05
    The whiskers are synthetic,
  • 00:39:06
    the tongue moves.
  • 00:39:08
    And I'll just reiterate that the objects in exhibition
  • 00:39:10
    are not the exact objects
  • 00:39:12
    depicted in the paintings.
  • 00:39:13
    Those are probably long gone if they ever existed.
  • 00:39:16
    The exhibition objects are representative of these types,
  • 00:39:19
    things that Moroni would have seen.
  • 00:39:21
    But as much as the portrait seems to record
  • 00:39:24
    in meticulous detail all of Isotta's status symbols
  • 00:39:27
    and her apparently unidealized face,
  • 00:39:30
    this is not a snapshot to use an anachronistic term,
  • 00:39:34
    a snapshot of reality.
  • 00:39:36
    And so I'll point your attention to her fabulous dress.
  • 00:39:39
    Green with gold brocade
  • 00:39:40
    and now you know very well
  • 00:39:42
    how that brocade would have been made,
  • 00:39:43
    and how much hand wound gold thread that would take.
  • 00:39:47
    Considering weaving techniques used in the renaissance,
  • 00:39:50
    it would be extremely unusual to have a dress like this
  • 00:39:54
    whose pattern grows so dramatically
  • 00:39:57
    from the bodice to the skirt.
  • 00:40:00
    I'm not saying it's impossible,
  • 00:40:01
    few things are impossible in the world
  • 00:40:04
    but it would be extremely unusual
  • 00:40:06
    and very difficult to have a dress like this.
  • 00:40:09
    It seems that Moroni has partly fictionalized her dress.
  • 00:40:13
    It's probably based on a dress she had, she wore
  • 00:40:16
    which he used as a point of departure
  • 00:40:18
    to create a more impressive visual effect.
  • 00:40:22
    And I suggest a similar play with reality
  • 00:40:25
    in the portrait of Gian Girolamo Grumelli
  • 00:40:28
    better known as the Man in Pink,
  • 00:40:30
    also from Palazzo Moroni.
  • 00:40:32
    He was, by the way, Isotta's husband
  • 00:40:36
    and imagine what their closets look like.
  • 00:40:38
    (audience laughing)
  • 00:40:41
    His pink and silver woven silk clothing
  • 00:40:44
    is just delectable to look at.
  • 00:40:47
    The clothing is almost the protagonist of his portrait.
  • 00:40:50
    But take a look at his sword carrier.
  • 00:40:53
    It seems to be partly invisible
  • 00:40:55
    so there should be a cross strap
  • 00:40:57
    which goes across the front to attach to the scabbard
  • 00:41:00
    as in Gabriel de la Cueva.
  • 00:41:02
    In this case, the cross strap is being pulled up
  • 00:41:05
    because of the angle at which
  • 00:41:06
    Gabriel's rapier is leaning against the plint.
  • 00:41:09
    But the Man in Pink has somehow hid his cross strap
  • 00:41:13
    behind the fabric of his trunk hose
  • 00:41:15
    or Moroni has painted it out
  • 00:41:18
    in order not to interrupt the scintillating pink hose
  • 00:41:22
    with a black line.
  • 00:41:24
    The same goes for the straps at the side,
  • 00:41:26
    they're articulated to support the scabbard
  • 00:41:29
    but nothing actually connects to the belt.
  • 00:41:32
    The straps disappear into thin air.
  • 00:41:35
    Moroni seems to conserve the integrity
  • 00:41:38
    of the pink trunk hose by defying physics.
  • 00:41:42
    And I suspect these liberties taken with Isotta
  • 00:41:44
    and the Man in Pink have gone unnoticed
  • 00:41:47
    by art historians until now
  • 00:41:48
    because the portraits are painted in such a way
  • 00:41:51
    that it seems to be a convincing
  • 00:41:53
    and meticulous representation of reality.
  • 00:41:56
    Now it's interesting to think about
  • 00:41:57
    how these portraits were perceived
  • 00:41:59
    by their first viewers.
  • 00:42:01
    These fictions would have been obvious
  • 00:42:03
    to Moroni's sitters who would know very well
  • 00:42:05
    how a sword carrier is supposed to look
  • 00:42:07
    and who would have been aware
  • 00:42:08
    of the kinds of patterns possible with woven brocade.
  • 00:42:12
    What did they think of Moroni playing with reality
  • 00:42:15
    in a way that's much less obvious to us now?
  • 00:42:20
    Moroni helped to shape his reputation
  • 00:42:22
    as an artist who captured the world as he saw it.
  • 00:42:26
    This portrait of the poet Giovanni Bressani
  • 00:42:29
    on loan from the National Galleries in Scotland,
  • 00:42:32
    if you're noticing that there is something different
  • 00:42:34
    about this portrait, you're right.
  • 00:42:37
    There is much more stuff in it,
  • 00:42:39
    stuff piled on a table that seems
  • 00:42:41
    to distance the viewer
  • 00:42:43
    in a way that none of his other portraits do.
  • 00:42:45
    The way Bressani is painted is also different.
  • 00:42:48
    So individual strokes of paint are apparent.
  • 00:42:52
    There's something stony, a little rigid and dry
  • 00:42:55
    in his articulation of the face.
  • 00:42:58
    Just compare for example the face
  • 00:42:59
    of Gabriele Albani, another older man
  • 00:43:03
    with a face of Bressani.
  • 00:43:05
    One smooth, Bressani is brushy.
  • 00:43:08
    The explanation for this difference
  • 00:43:11
    might be found on the base
  • 00:43:13
    of the foot shaped inkwell in Bressani's portrait.
  • 00:43:17
    Translated from the Latin the inscription says
  • 00:43:20
    Giovanni Battista Moroni painted him
  • 00:43:24
    whom he did not see.
  • 00:43:26
    This message coupled with a date on the portrait
  • 00:43:29
    of 1562, so two years after Bressani's death
  • 00:43:33
    indicates that Moroni probably painted him posthumously.
  • 00:43:37
    So he looks sort of lifeless
  • 00:43:38
    because Moroni did not paint him from life.
  • 00:43:42
    What is more, Moroni probably based his painting
  • 00:43:44
    on a portrait medal on loan to us from a private collection,
  • 00:43:48
    this is suggested by the fact
  • 00:43:49
    that the portrait medal shows Bressani with a skull cap,
  • 00:43:53
    with a circular ornament on the front
  • 00:43:55
    and a knot at the temple.
  • 00:43:56
    This is not apparent in the painting
  • 00:43:59
    but they are in x-rays of it.
  • 00:44:02
    So Moroni seems to have started
  • 00:44:04
    with the same head decoration as the medal
  • 00:44:06
    and either painted it out
  • 00:44:07
    or the details have been obscured over time.
  • 00:44:11
    The inscription on the inkwell,
  • 00:44:13
    I did not see this man seems to explain
  • 00:44:16
    why it looks so different from his other portraits.
  • 00:44:19
    Those he sees with his own eyes it seems to say
  • 00:44:22
    he can paint as his eyes saw them
  • 00:44:24
    but he adjusts his style to articulate
  • 00:44:28
    that this sitter was not studied from life.
  • 00:44:31
    In a way Moroni's self-consciously shapes
  • 00:44:34
    his own artistic persona.
  • 00:44:37
    I'm reaching the end of my lecture.
  • 00:44:41
    And to close I wanna share a few thoughts about Moroni
  • 00:44:44
    that came out of having produced this exhibition.
  • 00:44:47
    One is that the sense of the local
  • 00:44:49
    is important to Moroni's career
  • 00:44:52
    and in these two portraits
  • 00:44:53
    from the National Gallery of Ireland on the left
  • 00:44:55
    and I showed you the one on the right earlier on.
  • 00:44:58
    In both, a single word is legible
  • 00:45:01
    on the letters on the table and in the hand.
  • 00:45:04
    The name of a city on the left, Albino,
  • 00:45:08
    Moroni's birthplace.
  • 00:45:10
    And on the right, written on the letter in his hand,
  • 00:45:14
    Bergamo, also where he spent most of his life.
  • 00:45:17
    These men were probably from these cities
  • 00:45:19
    or lived in them.
  • 00:45:20
    They were of Moroni's world.
  • 00:45:24
    Moroni's geographic limitations
  • 00:45:26
    seemed to have shaped his career and fame or lack of it
  • 00:45:29
    but his world was much broader than this.
  • 00:45:31
    Bergamo was at the crossroads of Spanish Milan and Venice,
  • 00:45:35
    gateways to the rest of the world.
  • 00:45:37
    So even if he did not travel,
  • 00:45:39
    people and objects came to him.
  • 00:45:41
    So another important role of the objects in the show
  • 00:45:43
    is to make this point, however subtly,
  • 00:45:46
    German prints made their way to him,
  • 00:45:48
    probably German armor too.
  • 00:45:50
    I didn't talk about the armor
  • 00:45:51
    but you can see it in the exhibition.
  • 00:45:53
    Spanish patrons like Gabriel de la Cueva,
  • 00:45:56
    a Spanish duke who became governor of Milan
  • 00:45:58
    a few years after Moroni painted him.
  • 00:46:00
    And Spanish culture like Isotta's pendant cross,
  • 00:46:03
    goods from America, from the new world.
  • 00:46:06
    Moroni was not a world traveler
  • 00:46:08
    but his world was rich nonetheless.
  • 00:46:11
    There's much about Moroni that we don't fully understand
  • 00:46:14
    including his techniques, his process.
  • 00:46:16
    How did he achieve naturalism
  • 00:46:18
    for which he is so well-known?
  • 00:46:21
    I haven't even touched on the one portrait drawing
  • 00:46:24
    that has been attributed to Moroni, not unanimously
  • 00:46:28
    in the GDSU in Florence
  • 00:46:30
    which raises more questions than answers
  • 00:46:32
    about how he made his portraits.
  • 00:46:34
    Or the first evidence of under drawing
  • 00:46:36
    in a Moroni portrait discovered in preparation
  • 00:46:39
    for this exhibition in The Met's Lucrezia Agliardi Vertova,
  • 00:46:42
    so we're continuing to investigate
  • 00:46:44
    these aspects of his art.
  • 00:46:46
    And regarding Moroni himself,
  • 00:46:48
    not a single document related to any work of art,
  • 00:46:52
    paintings, portraits he produced has been found
  • 00:46:56
    nor any portraits of Moroni.
  • 00:46:58
    So one self-portrait has been proposed,
  • 00:47:01
    the figure in brown in the crowd
  • 00:47:03
    in the Assumption of The Virgin
  • 00:47:05
    which I showed you at the start of this talk.
  • 00:47:07
    I'm sure you remember it well, it's so distinctive.
  • 00:47:10
    A late work.
  • 00:47:12
    There's no external evidence to support this
  • 00:47:15
    but some say it looks like
  • 00:47:17
    a good candidate for a self-portrait,
  • 00:47:19
    that sort of modest looking chap peering out at us.
  • 00:47:24
    We don't know why he made the geographic decisions he did,
  • 00:47:27
    why he remained so close to home.
  • 00:47:30
    Whatever motivated this decision,
  • 00:47:31
    it appears to have had significant repercussions
  • 00:47:34
    for the kind of career that he had.
  • 00:47:36
    And he may have been very happy
  • 00:47:39
    with the kind of career that he had.
  • 00:47:42
    Moroni's portraits, his best portraits
  • 00:47:45
    showcase his brilliance
  • 00:47:47
    that the Man in Pink's gravity defying
  • 00:47:50
    sword carrier seems to have gone unnoticed for so long
  • 00:47:54
    may be a testament to the power of his illusions,
  • 00:47:57
    the spell they can cast on his viewers.
  • 00:48:00
    Over the last week I've seen the spell at work
  • 00:48:03
    as visitors stand in front of this
  • 00:48:05
    and other paintings in the oval room and east gallery.
  • 00:48:09
    There are many questions yet to answer
  • 00:48:11
    about Moroni's portraits but one thing is crystal clear.
  • 00:48:15
    Moroni's portraits reward and deserve another look.
  • 00:48:19
    And so I invite you to look again at Moroni
  • 00:48:22
    in the galleries which will be open until 7:30.
  • 00:48:25
    Thank you very much.
  • 00:48:26
    (audience applauding)
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