Two Satyrs in a Landscape

Titian (Tiziano Vecellio) Italian

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 964

Only thirty-five to forty drawings by the Venetian artist Titian survive. This famous early work is close in date to his Concert Champêtre (ca. 1509; Musée du Louvre, Paris). Titian's use of pen and ink is exquisitely pictorial here, with varied and freely applied strokes and small dabs of luminous white gouache, lending movement, texture, and tonal unity to the scene. His mastery is apparent everywhere, from the foreground figures built with broadly sculptural effects of chiaroscuro to the background landscape in which the forms of architecture and nature dissolve in the distant haze of the horizon. The poetic quality of the drawing is achieved through this subtlety of technique and a certain elusiveness of mood.

Two Satyrs in a Landscape, Titian (Tiziano Vecellio) (Italian, Pieve di Cadore ca. 1485/90?–1576 Venice), Pen and brown ink, highlighted with white gouache on fine, off-white laid paper

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