Leonardo da Vinci, Ginevra de' Benci, c. 1474/1478, oil on panel, National Gallery of Art, Ailsa Mellon Bruce Fund CLICK PICTURE TO ZOOM (Flash, 20k) Leonardo da Vinci painted this portrait of Ginevra de' Benci, a young Florentine noblewoman who, at the age of sixteen, married Luigi Niccolini in 1474. The work may have been an engagement or wedding portrait, or it may have been commissioned by Bernardo Bembo, the Venetian Ambassador to Florence and Ginevra's close friend and admirer. On the reverse side of the painting, a wreath of laurel and palm encircles a sprig of juniper and a scroll bears the Latin inscription, "Beauty Adorns Virtue." Fingerprints visible on the paint surface show how the artist used his hand as well as a brush to blend colors and create soft, delicate edges. This is the only portrait by Leonardo in the Western Hemisphere. At some point in its history, the wood panel was cut down by as much as one-third. The missing lower portion may have shown Ginevra's hands, possibly folded or crossed, in a pose similar to that seen in the Leonardo drawing or the Verrocchio sculpture below. LEFT: Leonardo da Vinci, Study of Hands, c. 1474, metalpoint over chalk, Windsor Castle, Royal Collection © HM Queen Elizabeth II RIGHT: Andrea del Verrocchio, Lady with a Bunch of Flowers, c. 1475, marble, Museo Nazionale del Bargello, Florence Portraits tell us a great deal about the subjects represented--from them we learn how people looked, what they wore, when and where they lived, what they did for a living. A portrait also may provide hints about the sitter's character, personality, and mood. Sometimes it can tell us what the artist thinks (or wants us to think) about the person he or she is painting. Why don't you give it a try--express yourself! Choose a model, then visit the Art Zone to paint a portrait online using PaintBox or PixelFace. Copyright © 2007 National Gallery of Art, Washington |