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女子与窗扉边的男子肖像

ca. 1440
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 602
这幅作品是那一时代最伟大的佛罗伦萨画派肖像画之一。它是存留至今最早的意大利双人肖像画,也是以室内场景为背景的同类肖像画中最早的一件。这幅画可能是为纪念图中两个人物的婚约或是婚礼而绘制的。女子左腕上有“lealt[a]”(忠诚)字样,仿佛刺绣在她红色长袍的袖口上。她身着一位新妇的华丽衣装,佩戴着奢华的珠宝。细致描绘的服装和首饰以及背景中表现出的房屋和花园都表明了这个家庭的财富。

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • 标题: 女子与窗扉边的男子肖像
  • 艺术家: 弗拉·菲利波·利皮,意大利,约1406–1469年
  • 创作日期: 约1440年
  • 材料: 木板蛋彩画
  • 尺寸: 251⁄4 x 161⁄2 英寸(64.1 x 41.9厘米)
  • 来源信息: 马昆德收藏,亨利·G·马昆德捐赠,1889年
  • 藏品编号: 89.15.19
  • Curatorial Department: European Paintings

Audio

仅适用于: English
Cover Image for 5058. Portrait of a Woman with a Man at a Casement

5058. Portrait of a Woman with a Man at a Casement

Fra Filippo Lippi, 1440

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STEPHAN WOLOHOJIAN: So many works of art were commissioned at the time of unions in the Renaissance. It's very much the way today you often have a registry when you get married and fill a household with wonderful things.

NARRATOR: You’re looking at a double portrait. Scholars think it was probably made to celebrate an engagement.

RABBI SAMANTHA FRANK: But I'm also looking at it and seeing this woman who's really the central figure, and maybe to an extent she's a central figure in their future life together.

I'm Rabbi Samantha Frank. I'm seeing under his hand this sort of orange-and-black striped pattern. What's going on there underneath his hands?

NARRATOR: That’s a coat of arms. Curator Stephan Wolohojian.

STEPHAN WOLOHOJIAN: He's wooing her with a, you know, “You're going to be part of the Scolari family.”

RABBI SAMANTHA FRANK: I want to know everything about the jewelry that she's wearing, just because I love jewelry.

STEPHAN WOLOHOJIAN: On her head, on the hairpiece she wears, there is a brooch which we call the Brocchetta ditesta, a head brooch. On her shoulder there is another brooch, a Brocchetta di spalla. They were very symbolic and very important and monetarily very expensive gifts that came at a moment of exchange.

NARRATOR: In this time and place, marriages between wealthy families often had more to do with money and power than they did with love.

STEPHAN WOLOHOJIAN: And you can see in many ways, looking at this portrait that this, let’s call it what it is – trophy – is what you were getting. The jewels and the rich finery that she's wearing, the fur of her dress, the pearls of her costume, the embroidery… this is a trophy.

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