painting by Giambattista Pittoni at the Strasbourg Museum of Fine Arts From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Head of the Virgin (also known as La Tête de Vierge or La Testa della Vergine) is a 18th-century portrait painted in oil by Giambattista Pittoni, made around 1730, during the Rococo in Venice, Italy, exhibited at the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Strasbourg.[1] Many people[2] Think Head of the Virgin's eyes glance is mysterious, as at the time it was not portrayed with a low gaze.
Head of the Virgin | |
---|---|
Italian: La Testa della Vergine, French: La Tête de Vierge | |
Artist | Giambattista Pittoni |
Year | c. 1730 |
Type | Oil on poplar |
Dimensions | 110 cm × 89 cm (44 in × 35 in) |
Location | Musée des Beaux-Arts de Strasbourg, Strasbourg |
The remote pictorial touch, the delicate palette, are typical Pittoni characteristics. The work is the detail of the great painting that can be found in the National Gallery in London titled «The Nativity with God the Father and the Holy Spirit». The painting could be a cover created for sale by Pittoni or a preparatory sketch (The Croquis) for the altarpiece as for the similar work from Berlin.
The closed eyes that look down, for the time, a unique and rare representation of the Madonna, which is also repeated in the Pittoni The Nativity with God the Father and the Holy Ghost of the London National Gallery museum.
It is possible that Pittoni looks for further mystical strength in it, exasperating the interpretation of the critic Alexander Nagel on Leonardo da Vinci's "Head of a Woman" in which "the eyes do not focus on any outward object, and they give the impression that they will remain where they are: they see through the filter of an inner state, rather than receive immediate impressions from the outside world. It is the attitude of being suspended in a state of mind beyond specific thought—unaware, even, of its own body...here an inner life is suggested by a new order of pictorial effects, without recourse to action or narrative."[3]
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