RESTORATIONS - "Portrait of Giovanni
dalle Bande Nere" - Gian Paolo Pace
::Gian Paolo
Pace
Portrait of Giovanni dalle Bande Nere
(Venice, doc. from 1528 to 1560)
Uffizi Gallery - Florence
The painting has an
interesting history which it is worth
relating, even briefly. In his 1568
edition of the "Lives of the
Artists", Vasari wrote that Pietro
Aretino had made a gift to Cosimo
I of a portrait of his father, Giovanni
dalle Bande Nere. The fearless military
commander died in Mantua in 1526 and
Aretino, who also happened to be in
the city at the time, had a dead mask
made from the body by Giulio Romano.
It was to this mask that Aretino referred
in a letter, written in November 1545,
to Gian Paolo Pace, who painted the
portrait. "Thanks to the miracles
you are capable of achieving with
your paintbrush, you have transfused
living colour to the effigy, dully
transfixed in the amber of death."
He went on to express his pleasure
in being able to present Cosimo with
such a good image of his "immortal
father". A month earlier, in
fact, Aretino had written to Cosimo
that the portrait of his father should
have been painted by Titian but, as
the artist already had other committments,
the work was to be done by another
artist who was, however, equally skilled.
"I will send you a calm and fearsome
image [] as if by the hand of that
excellent artist". Now expertly
restored, the shining armour complements
Giovannis stern profile and the light
illuminates his features, enlivening
that expression which death has extinguished.
Antonio Natali
(Director of Renaissance and Mannerism
Department Uffizi Gallery - Florence)
This painting
was restored thanks to the initiative
of the ROMUALDO
DEL BIANCO FOUNDATION
and the co-operation with the project
"BE PART OF HISTORY" by
VIVA HOTELS in Florence. The Project
was created in order to give a contribution
to Florence Artistic Heritage with
restoration of pieces of art of different
Florentine Museums.
restoration notes
by Mariarita Signorini (in italian)