The Later Works of Titian by Claude Phillips
page 87 of 122 (71%)
page 87 of 122 (71%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
lascivia, ma a commiserazione," and the contrary might, without
exaggeration, be said of the Pitti picture.[52] Another of the Barbarigo heirlooms which so passed into the Hermitage is the ever-popular _Venus with the Mirror_, the original of many repetitions and variations. Here, while one winged love holds the mirror, the other proffers a crown of flowers, not to the goddess, but to the fairest of women. The rich mantle of Venetian fashion, the jewels, the coiffure, all show that an idealised portrait of some lovely Cytherean of Venice, and no true mythological piece, has been intended. At this date, or thereabouts, is very generally placed, with the _Rape of Europa_ presently to be discussed, the _Jupiter and Antiope_ of the Louvre, more popularly known as the _Venere del Pardo_.[53] Seeing that the picture is included in the list[54] sent by Titian to Antonio Perez in 1574, setting forth the titles of canvases delivered during the last twenty-five years, and then still unpaid for, it may well have been completed somewhere about the time at which we have arrived. To the writer it appears nevertheless that it is in essentials the work of an earlier period, taken up and finished thus late in the day for the delectation of the Spanish king. Seeing that the _Venere del Pardo_ has gone through two fires--those of the Pardo and the Louvre--besides cleanings, restorations, and repaintings, even more disfiguring, it would be very unsafe to lay undue stress on technique alone. Yet compare the close, sculptural modelling in the figure of Antiope with the broader, looser handling in the figure of Europa; compare the two landscapes, which are even more divergent in style. The glorious sylvan prospect, which adds so much freshness and beauty to the _Venere del Pardo_, is conspicuously earlier in manner than, for instance, the backgrounds to the _Diana and Actæon_ and _Diana and Calisto_ of Bridgewater House. The captivating work is not without its faults, chief |
|