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Portrait Of Laura Pisani, 1525. by Gabriele Cappellini, called Calzolaretto
by Gabriele Cappellini, called
Calzolaretto (previously Dosso Dossi)
PORTRAIT OF LAURA PISANI. 1525
Estimate 150,000 — 200,000 USD
LOT SOLD. 170,500 USD (Hammer Price with Buyer's
Premium)
SOLD BY THE
J. PAUL GETTY MUSEUM TO BENEFIT FUTURE PAINTING ACQUISITIONS
IMPORTANT OLD MASTER PAINTINGS
& SCULPTURE
27 JANUARY
2011 | 10:00 AM EST
NEW
YORK
Painter: Gabriele Cappellini,
called Calzolaretto
ACTIVE IN FERRARA IN THE SECOND AND THIRD DECADES OF THE 16TH CENTURY
PORTRAIT OF LAURA PISANI
inscribed and dated on the paper sheet on the table:
LAV. PISI. / ANNOR / XX / MDXXV (1525)
oil on canvas
37 1/4 by 31 1/4 in.; 94.6 by 79.4 cm.
READ CONDITION REPORT
PROVENANCE
Vernon James Watney, Cornbury Park, Oxfordshire,
England, by 1907;
Thence
by inheritance in 1928 to his wife, Lady Margaret Watney, Cornbury Park,
Oxfordshire;
Thence by
inheritance in 1943 to her son, Oliver Vernon Watney, Cornbury Park,
Oxfordshire;
Held in
trust by the estate upon his death in 1966;
By whom sold, London, Christie's, 23 June 1967, lot 23
(as by Dosso Dossi);
Where acquired by J. Paul Getty (1892-1976), Malibu and Sutton Place;
Held in trust by the estate upon his death, and
distributed to The J. Paul Getty Museum, 1978.
LITERATURE
B. Berenson, North Italian Painters of the
Renaissance, New York and London 1907, p. 209 (as by Dosso Dossi);
H. Mendelsohn, Das Werk der Dossi, Munich 1914, pp.
190-191 (as by Dosso Dossi);
V.J. Watney, A Catalogue of Pictures and Miniatures at
Cornbury and 11 Berkeley Square, Oxford 1915, p. 12, no. 30 (as "Called Dosso
Dossi, Giovanni Dossi");
A. Venturi, Storia dell'Arte Italiana, vol. IX: "La
Pittura del Cinquecento," Milan 1928, p. 976;
B. Berenson, Pitture Italiane del Rinascimento, Milan
1936, p. 150 (as by Dosso Dossi);
B. Berenson, Lorenzo Lotto, Milan 1956, p. 95,
reproduced fig. 166 (as Lorenzo Lotto, formerly attributed to Dosso Dossi);
B. Berenson, Italian Pictures of the Renaissance,
Venetian School, London 1957, Vol. I, p. 101 (as by Lorenzo Lotto);
A. Mezzetti, Il Dosso e Battista Ferraresi, Milan
1965, p. 77, no. 29 (as by Dosso Dossi, with a question about the quality);
"Nachrichten aus dem Kunsthandel," in Pantheon,
(July/August 1967), p. 316, reproduced;
D. Jaffe, Summary Catalogue of European Paintings in
The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles 1997, p. 35, reproduced (as Circle of
Dosso Dossi).
CATALOGUE NOTE
The authorship of this striking and impressive
portrait has long puzzled scholars of Italian art, as has the identity of the
beautiful young woman who is depicted. She appears to be a member of the large
and powerful Pisani family, which had branches in Ferrara and Venice, among
other Italian cities. This woman was most likely a member of the Ferrarese
branch and possibly a poet, given the way she is here depicted. When Bernard
Berenson first published the portrait in 1907, he gave it to Dosso Dossi, as did
Henriette Mendelsohn in 1914; however, the attribution was always considered
slightly problematic, as the face of the woman was inconsistent with other known
portraits by Dosso. In fact, Berenson himself later included the Portrait of
Laura Pisani in both his Italian Pictures of the Renaissance, Venetian School
and his study on Lorenzo Lotto, attributing it in full to Lotto in both
publications.
Berenson's attribution to Lotto was based on his
belief that the work was a pendant to another portrait thought to be by Lotto,
the Portrait of Antonio Correr (formerly, Ricketts and Shannon Collection,
London), also of 1525, which featured an almost identical sheet of paper with
the inscription "ANT. COR. / ANNOR / XXVII / MDXXV."1 In spite of the
similarities between the written inscriptions in these paintings, the
attribution of the present work to Lotto does not seem tenable. We know, for
example, that Antonio Correr married a Venetian woman by the name of Elizabetta
Priuli in 1521,2 four years before these portraits were executed. That a
gentleman of some stature in Venice should be depicted in a portrait with a
woman who was not his wife would seem very strange indeed. Additionally, the
crispness of Laura's slightly planar face and the bold, geometric design of her
carpet-covered table are at odds with the softness and dark palette of the
Antonio Correr portrait.
The connection of the Portrait of Laura Pisani to the
circle of artists working around Dosso Dossi and his brother Battista seems much
more compelling. A comparison between the present work and Dosso's Portrait of a
Woman with an Ermine (Laura Dianti), in the Musee Conde, Chantilly confirms the
association: both women wear diaphanous white blouses with ruching and black
trim around neck and cuffs under voluminous black gowns; both have a delicate
gold chain around their necks and an elaborate jeweled headpiece, through which
their dark hair is interwoven. Such costume was typical of Ferrarese women
during the 1520s and 30s, and these details firmly place the work within this
milieu.
Gabriele Cappellini, called Calzolaretto emerges from
the large number of artists working with and around Dosso Dossi as the likeliest
author for the present work. Very little is known about Calzolaretto, who is
recorded in Dosso's workshop as late as 1540, when he received payments in
February and June for gilding the frames for Dosso and Battista Dossi's Saint
Michael Overcoming Satan and Saint George and the Dragon from their patron, Duke
Ercole II of Ferrara.3 Only two paintings, both altarpieces, have been firmly
given to Calzolaretto in the current literature: Saint Francis of Assisi
Receiving the Stigmata with Saints Peter, James the Greater and Louis, King of
France, of circa 1515 (Pinacoteca Nazionale, Ferrara, inv. no. 101) and The
Apparition of the Madonna and Child to Saints John the Baptist and John the
Evangelist in the Presence of Ludovico Arivieri and his Wife, of 1522
(Archbishop's Residence, Ferrara). Both works show similarities to the present
portrait: the face of Saint John the Evangelist from the Arivieri altarpiece and
in particular, the faces of Saints James the Greater and Louis, King of France
in the Pinacoteca panel are remarkably similar in construction and countenance
to Laura Pisani. The identification of the Portrait of Laura Pisani with the
work of Calzolaretto is an important step in reconstructing his oeuvre and in
distinguishing between the works of Dosso's followers in general. As the first
secular painting to be given to the artist, the Portrait of Laura Pisani is an
important stepping stone along the path towards a better understanding of
Calzolaretto, the extent of his participation in Dosso's workshop and the
elaboration of his own unique artistic personality.
We are
grateful to Keith Christiansen and Mauro Lucco for each independently suggesting
the attribution to Calzolaretto on the basis of firsthand inspection and
photographs respectively.
An alternate attribution to
Sebastiano Filippi has been suggested by Alessandro Ballarin on the basis of
photographs.
1. B. Berenson, Lorenzo Lotto, p. 95, reproduced fig.
165.
2. Ibid.
3. P. Humfrey, M. Lucco, et. al., Dosso Dossi: Court
Painter in Renaissance Ferrara, exhibition catalogue, New York 1998, p. 224.