Neha Patil (Editor)

Portrait of Camilla Gonzaga and Her Three Sons

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Year
  
c. 1539–1540

Artist
  
Parmigianino

Created
  
1540

Period
  
Mannerism

Medium
  
Oil on panel

Location
  
Museo Nacional Del Prado

Media
  
Oil paint

Genre
  
Portrait

Portrait of Camilla Gonzaga and Her Three Sons httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Dimensions
  
128 cm × 97 cm (50 in × 38 in)

Similar
  
Parmigianino artwork, Artwork at Museo Nacional Del Prado, Portraits

Portrait of Camilla Gonzaga and Her Three Sons is a painting attributed to the Italian Mannerist artist Parmigianino and others, executed around 1539-1540 and housed in the Museo del Prado, Madrid, Spain. It forms a pair with another painting in the Prado, the Portrait of Pier Maria Rossi di San Secondo, Camilla's husband, a painting which is unanimously assigned to Parmigianino.

Contents

History

It is mentioned in a 1686 inventory of the collections of the Royal Alcazar of Madrid, as the wife of the count of San Sigundo. The subject has been identified with Camilla Gonzaga, wife of imperial general Pier Maria III de' Rossi basing on this note, and by another from 1630 by one of his descendants about the existence of a portrait of him by Parmigianino.

The painting arrived in Spain in 1664, after King Philip IV had supported to the Rossi family in a dispute with the Farnese of Parma about some territories. It has been dated from around 1539-1540, but the attribution to Parmigianino is controversial, the author having been identified also as an artist from Bronzino's workshop. It is possible that Parmigianino, who died in 1540, had not been able to finish the portrait, which was completed by another artist, perhaps basing on his sketch.

Description

The countess is portrayed on a black background, wearing a precious scarlet dress, a frilled mousseline on the chest, and rich set of jewels. She looks to the right, ideally towards the portrait of her husband. The countess is surrounded by her three sons, Troilo, Federico and Ippolito. It is the first case in Italian art in which this iconography was used.

The three sons appear to be from different hands, and were perhaps added in different moments.

References

Portrait of Camilla Gonzaga and Her Three Sons Wikipedia