Lute Player

Valentin de Boulogne French

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 622

Painted in Rome by the leading French Caravaggist artist, this picture later belonged to Louis XIII’s minister, Cardinal Mazarin, a lover of music and a promoter of the new Italian creation of opera (he was himself Italian) as well as a passionate art collector. The open part book seems to show lute tablature, and we might imagine this soldier of fortune (note the armor) consoling himself after being rejected by his beloved, hence the melancholic expression. Valentin joined the rowdy confraternity of northern artists in Rome, taking the name Amador—lover boy. Might this picture be a sort of self-portrait?

#5200. The Lute Player

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Lute Player, Valentin de Boulogne (French, Coulommiers-en-Brie 1591–1632 Rome), Oil on canvas

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