Neha Patil (Editor)

Woman with a Mirror

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Year
  
c. 1515

Location
  
The Louvre

Created
  
1512–1515

Genre
  
History painting

Artist
  
Titian

Medium
  
oil on canvas

Period
  
High Renaissance

Woman with a Mirror venice11umwblogsorgfiles201112womanwitham

Dimensions
  
99 cm × 76 cm (39 in × 30 in)

Similar
  
Violante, Flora, Vanity, La Schiavona, Sacred and Profane Love

Woman with a Mirror (French: La Femme au miroir) is a painting by Titian, dated to c. 1515 and now in the Musée du Louvre.

History

It is known to have been in the Gonzaga family's collection in Mantua from which it was bought by Charles I of England. After Charles' execution, it was sold off and purchased by Louis XIV of France for the Palace of Versailles.

Several attempts have been made to identify the main female figure – these have included Titian's lover, Alfonso d'Este's lover Laura Dianti, or Federico Gonzaga's lover Isabella Boschetti. None of these theories fit the date ascribed to the painting through analysis of its style, which is 1512–15, when the courts of Mantua and Ferrara were first becoming interested in Titian. Dianti was painted by Titian in a portrait of 1523. She is probably just a model who appears in other paintings – the same woman with frizzy reddish blonde hair appears in a series of paintings from around the same time (including the Flora at the Uffizi, the Vanity in Munich, the Salome in the Galleria Doria Pamphilj, the Violante and the Young woman in a black dress in Vienna) as well as several Madonnas and the clothed figure in Sacred and Profane Love. As happened with the 'Bella' series, it was still customary for the artist's workshop to create similar works with variations from the same studies if not from the same cartoon.

Many versions of the work are known, equal in quality to the original but not as large. The best are in Museu in Barcelona, in the gallery of Prague Castle and in the National Gallery of Art in Washington.

References

Woman with a Mirror Wikipedia