THE J. PAUL GETTY MUSEUM LIBRARY mas Catalogue of a || LOAN EXHIBITION OF _ PAINTINGS by TITIAN ait || DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS FEBRUARY Ist to 15th 7928 | ANnle SIXTH LOAN EXHIBITION OF OED MASTERS PAINTINGS BY TITIAN eT DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS FEBRUARY ist to 15th 1928 THES. . 4 > 1 / Me * a LR PAUL G 7 th 4 A RY MUSEUM ORE MW OAwD It should not be necessary to emphasize the significance of an exhibition which comprises more than a score of paintings by Titian. The conception of Titian as a genius of painting is, at least as a name, the common possession of every educated person, although familiarity with his supreme art is made rather difficult for the art lover in this country. The com- paratively small number of paintings by Titian which have found their way to the new world are spread over the entire country, most of them preserved in private collections which are more or less inaccessible to the average individual. All the more gratifying is the fact that the exhibition gives the American public, for the first time, an opportunity to see more paintings by Titian than would be possible even in the largest European galleries, with the exception of those of Madrid and Vienna. The willingness with which out of town owners—public galleries as well as private collections—have placed their treasures at the disposal of the Museum, should be recog- nized with the greatest gratitude by the Detroit public. Titian more than any other master embodies in his art the spirit of Venice, that city so over-rich in great painters. A fortunate star hovered over his incredibly long and active life. Born in the small mountain city of Cadore, on the slope of the Alps, he received his first impressions of nature from a landscape which combined heroic gravity with quiet and lovely serenity. And these rugged blue mountain peaks dotted with ancient castles, the fresh green meadows and rushing mountain streams which had surrounded his child- hood, returned with astonishing faithfulness even in the very latest of the pictures of the old master. He came to Venice to become a painter as a boy of about ten years, to that city which as none other in the world makes intelligible the wonders of an art which is born of its environment: the dreamlike image of precious and colorful marble architecture which grows out of the blue sea; the surging hosts of multicolored costumes which enlivened the magic stage of this city which in Titian’s time was still the uncontested commercial metropolis of the world, the link between the Orient and Occident; the carpets and fabrics, gold mosaics and sculptures with which the great merchants and noblemen, to whom nature had denied the massive structures which were witness of great wealth in Florence and Rome, embellished their palaces. And all this dipped into the fine haze of the atmosphere, which dyes the light golden and completes the miracle of intensifying all the colors in their luminosity, at the same time blending them harmoniously together! This was the world in which Titian grew to be a painter. But the time itself was also favorable to the bringing forth of a great painter. For it was just in the last decades of the fifteenth century that Venetian art had fully attained the ability to become the mirror of this colorful world. Jacopo and Giovanni Bellini had taken over the great art of Andrea Mantegna: his clear and precise drawing and the principles of his grandly conceived compositions; Donatello had trans- mitted to Padua, whence it had extended to the city of the lagoons, the spirit and form of the Florentine early Renais- sance; and Antonello da Messina, bringing from Flanders the secrets of oil technic, had given into the hands of the Venetian painters the final means for the attainment of softness and luminosity of color. We know scarcely anything of the apprenticeship of the artist, who was born in 1476 or 77. It seems, however, that Vasaris account of his having been the pupil of Giovanni Bellini is right. The fact that after Bellini’s death in 1516, Titian, as we know from documentary evidence, completed the unfinished work of the aged master—the celebrated Bacchanal (now in the Widener collection in Philadelphia)— is proof of the intimate and friendly relationship between the two artists. Of a greater and more direct influence, however, was the time he spent, together with Sebastiano del Piombo and Palma Vecchio, in the great Giorgione’s studio. Giorgione, who died of the plague at the early age of 32 (1510), is regarded from the artistic viewpoint as well as from that of his influence upon the development of painting, as one of the most important painters of modern times. The loosened composition, the chiaroscuro and the new impasto with which he had replaced the carefully smoothed and enamel-like painting of the Quattrocento, influenced not only the development of the following decades, but, through Titian, who consistently evolved Giorgione’s style, of centuries. Titian himself reached his real maturity, and apparently also his full productivity, at the comparatively late age of thirty-five or forty years. At any rate it is astonishing how few works of his earlier years have been preserved. The pictures in our exhibition comprise approximately six decades of the master’s long career. The earliest work, the Madonna and Child (Fig. 1), in technic and composition closely related to the socalled Gypsy Madonna in Vienna, is painted at about the same time as that picture (1502-5). The conception of this Virgin, who regards the Child tenderly and thought- fully from half-closed eyelids, is entirely in the sense of Giorgione, and in the pictorial treatment of the folds also the influence of this master is evident. Of only a little later date is the figure of the woman in white in the three-figure picture from our Museum, The Appeal, (Fig. 2), the other two figures of which are attributed to Giorgione and Sebastiano del Piombo. The picture was either from the first a combined work of the three artists, who were associated in Giorgione’s studio—a case of collaboration which is not at all unique in the history of art—or it is a painting begun by Giorgione, which after the death of the master was finished by his two friends. What is of special interest for us is the date of the figure by Titian, which in either case must have been around 1510, the year of Giorgione’s death. Of about 1515, the period when Titian, almost forty years old, had reached his full development and had created some of his most famous masterpieces, such as the Sacred and Profane Love in the Borghese Palace in Rome, is the Portrait of a Man (Fig. 3). The majority of paintings in the exhibition belong to Titian’s maturity proper, the quarter of a century between 1530 and 1555. A more precise dating here is rather difficult in the cases where no documentary evidence gives hint, and after all it is of no great importance. Titian is now standing at the height of his career, in full possession of all the means of artistic expression which his style demanded and which he applies with free and almost superhuman ease. In the case of portraits the personalities represented are sometimes an aid in determining the dates of undated pictures. Thus, for instance, The Artist’s Son Pomponio (Fig. 6), who by his extravagant squandering and other bad habits was to bring sorrow and disappointment to his father, is here represented at the age of sixteen or eighteen years, which fact, since Pomponio was born in 1520, makes it possible to date the picture in the late thirties. The Doge Andrea Gritti (Fig. 5), a patron of Titian, must have been painted around 1535, as we have record of another painting of the same man finished shortly after his death in 1538 which makes him appear somewhat older. Of particular interest is the sketchy Portrait of Philip II of Spain (Fig. 15). The painting, together with another similar one now in Swedish possession, was certainly done from life during Titian’s sojourn in Augsburg in 1550-51, and gives a splendid characterization of the taciturn and morose Infant. With the aid of these sketches Titian painted about the same time that somewhat flattering and elegant portrait of Philip now in the Prado in Madrid, with gold enriched armor over a white costume, which we know was sent over to Queen Mary of England during the negotiations for their marriage and of which the queen became “greatly enamoured.” Our sketch remained in the artist’s keeping until the end of his life and was then sold, together with his house, to the Barberigo family, in whose possession it remained until the nineteenth century. There are in this exhibition only a few pictures of the mythological subjects for which Titian was so famous. However, the three works of this kind, the wonderful Dande (Fig. 13), almost contemporary with the painting of the same subject done in Rome in 1545 or 46 for the Farnese family, the Adonis from about the same period, and the Venus and Adonis, another version of the painting in the Prado executed for Philip of Spain in 1554, give an adequate and splendid idea of the convincingly genuine spirit of the antique with which Titian impregnated these glowing, passion filled figures. The strength of the aged master seemed inexhaustible. There is no sign of fading power in the two works of his last period which are shown in our exhibition: the portrait of the so-called Fulvio Orsini (Fig. 21), done in 1561, and the marvellous Man with a Flute (Fig. 19), from our own Museum, of about the same date. On the contrary, there is apparent a moving inner life, and now that eye and hand no longer obey his will, he compensates by means of broad masses of color, light and shade, and where with others weakness would begin, with him results a new expression. And in the Crowning with Thorns in Munich, the work of a ninety- five year old man and one of the greatest paintings of all time, he masters problems which not until a hundred years later, on another soil, an equally great genius, Rembrandt, was able to understand and similarly solve. We have mentioned above that Titian, more than any other painter of Venice, embodies the artistic spirit of this city. We can go farther and say that he more than any other artist, with the exception perhaps of Raphael alone, has succeeded in expressing the true spirit of the Renaissance; that he more than any one else since the golden days of the Greek antique, has opened men’s eyes to the beauty of the physical world. There is something in Titian’s paintings akin to the ecstasy of spring, as though ravished eyes could see only perfection in all the objects of creation—in man as well as in nature. The nobility of this perfection permits the expression of the most exquisite human emotions, as well as the lifting of sacred events into the sphere of the sublime. One receives the impression that his figures, whether in worldy or in devout mood, are animated by a higher life, This is true likewise of his portraits several of which rep- resent persons whom we know from portraits by other paint- ers. Though equally convincing as likenesses, Titian more than any of the others, succeeds in unearthing an inner aristocracy which expresses itself in features and in bearing. And in his landscapes there breathes the very spirit of Pan. Trees are alive: dark woods dream, strong oaks writhe in passion like human beings; brooks babble; and even the clouds, pale and veil-like, rosy silvered, or darkly massed and gold encircled, reflect the longing desire and the ardent woo- ing of those godlike beings who people these scenes. The delight of the world; the pagan beauty of sensuous love; the integrity of life; the true freedom of the long-lost golden age, these were reborn with Titian. WALTER HEIL ~MAabDONNA AND CHILD Canvas: 18 inches by 22 inches. - Painted about 1505. 2. THe AppgAt (Jason, Medea and Creusa) Canvas: 3314 inches by 2714 inches. The feminine figure on the left was painted by Titian about 1508-10, while the two other figures were probably painted by Giorgione and Sebastiano del Piombo. Described by W. R. Valentiner in the Bulletin of the Detroit Institute of Arts, March, 1926; by Paul peer in Art in America, Vol. 15, p. 35. Bernard Berenson, who in a recent letter accepted the figure to the left as being by the hand of Titian, has expressed the opinion that the two other figures may also be works of Titian from an earlier phase of his career. From the collection of the Grand Duke of Oldenburg, . Germany. The Detroit Institute of Arts 3. Portrait o-r A MAN Canvas: 31 inches by 27 inches. Painted.about 1515. Catalogued in the Fifth Loan Exhibition of Old and Modern Masters, The Detroit Institute of Arts, October, 1927. Mentioned in Ridolfi, Le Meraviglie d Arte, Venice, 1648, Volta, 1382. From the collection of Lord Brownlow, Ashbridge Park, Hetfordshire. Lent by Mr. and Mrs. Edsel B. Ford 4. PorTRAIT OF ANDREA DE” FRAN Canvas: 32 inches by 25 inches. Painted about 1530. | Described and illustrated by Bernard _ ftir M. J. Friedlander zum 60 Geburtstag, | From the collection of M. Viardot, oneal about 153035. : Mentioned by Oscar Fischel, Ti F "Stuttgart, 1906,.p.« 23. yo _ From the collection of Me Job 6. Portrait OF THE Artist's Son PomMpon Canvas: 41 inches by 33% inches. — ce Painted about 1535-40. ae : Described by Oscar Fischel, Titian Ki p. 103; Gronau, “Unknown Portraits © fiir Bildende Kunst, May, 1922. 7. PorTRAIT OF A MAN witH A Hawk (Called Giorgio Cornaro) Canvas: 42 inches by 37 inches. Painted about 1530-40. — Signed Titianus F. Engraved by William Skelton, 1811. Described by Waagen in Treasures of Art in Great Britain, London, 1854, Vol. II, p. 278; by Crowe and Cavalcaselle in Life and Times of Titian, London, 1881, Vol. II, p. 19; by Oscar Fischel, Titian, (Klassiker der Kunst) Stuttgart, 1906, p. 72; in Kaiser Friedrich Museum Verein, IIlustrierter Katalog der Ausstellung von Bildnissen, Berlin, 1909, p. 23; by Charles Ricketts, Titian, London, 1910, p. 96. From the collections: Earl of Carlisle, Castle Howard, Yorkshire, England; Dr. Eduard Simon, Berlin. * Lent by Mr. A. W. Erickson, New York 8. TosBiAs AND THE ANGEL yc Canvas: 3514 inches by 32% inches Painted about 1540 ae Described in the catalogue of the Royal Academy, London, 1911 Authenticated by Georg Gror Detlev Baron von Hadeln oa Lent by Mr. Richard _ 9. Portrait oF A MEMBER OF THE BARBARO FAMILY Canvas: 20 inches by 15 inches Painted about 1540 Described in the catalogue of Les anciennes Ecoles de Pein- turs dans les Palais et Collections privées Russes. L’exposition organisée a St. Petersbourg en 1909, Brussels, 1910, p. 36 Authenticated by Detlev Baron von Hadeln From the collections: Carlo Rossi, Wenice; the Grand Duchess Marie of Russia; Baron K. E. von Liphart, Florence; Baron Ernest von Liphart, Director of the Museum of the Hermitage, Petrograd Lent anonymously 10. Portrait o—r A MAN Canvas: 391% inches by 3314 inches. Painted about 1540-45. Signed in the lower right corner “Titia.”” Described by Oscar Fischel in Art in America, August, 1926, p. 192. Authenticated by Georg Gronau, Oscar Fischel, Bernard Berenson and August L. Mayer. From the collection of Mr. Theodore Fischer, Lucerne, Switzerland. Lent by Mr. F. Kleinberger, New York 11. ADonis Canvas: 3834 x 274. "Painted about 1540-50. Described by F. Mason Perkins it in f October, 1921. Lent by Mr. and ive George Bl ‘mer * . tar - mn _ = wg atin ds am Li ae , P at # + ue Ver ~ = % o . ‘f ‘ ‘ > ‘ » aay 12. MADONNA AND CHILD witH St. MAGDALEN Canvas: 39% inches by 31% inches. Painted about 1545-50. Authenticated by Georg Gronau, August L. Mayer, Wil- helm Bode and Oscar Fischel. From the collections: Prince Borghese, Rome; Lord Rad- stock, London, England. Lent by Mr. Norbert Fischmann, Munich, Germany Arrival of painting delayed by one week _ Canvas: 474% inches by 67 inches. _ Painted about 154550. . “” eae 1927, p. 222, 322. Canvas: 42 oe by 34 YA, inches. Painted about 1550 © Authenticated by Cone Gronau >] % Canvas: 5214 inches by 37% inch Painted about 1550-51. _ Bey: Described by Oscar Fischel in T Stuttgart, 1927, p. 159, 316; illu: Titian, London, 1910, pl. CXVII From the collections: Giu Franz von Lenbach, Munich. Lent by the Cincinnati Museum # neat Beg X : Oe eee Ye Be eae oi 2 16. Porrrarr or A Lavy (The Artist s Canvas: 37% inches by 30 inches. = Painted about 1550-55. ary, 1928. | From the Seen of Lord Lecot Lent by Mr. Colin Agnew, 17. Portrait or A MAN Bae Canvas: 471% inches by 3634 inches. _ Painted about 1550-55 — yy Mentioned by Bernard Berenson, in the Renaissance, 1897, p. 139. 1 oa eaes Authenticated by Bernard Berenson 2 From the collection of Prince Giova Lent by Mr. Frank P. Wood, T te rO As 2 rs < . * r G \ i” hee ie Se , ae wa { Pf i, he * " ; ‘ > é * a 18. Mater Dotorosa , Panel: 29 inches by 23 inches. Painted about 1550-55. 3 Signed at the right: “Titianus.” Described by Waagen in Treasures of by Detlev Baron von Hadeln in ee is October, 1924. 7 Authenticated by Adolfo Venti From the collections of Prince Bor Fletcher, London; Alfred Fletcher, Fletcher, London. yo 19. Venus AND ADONIS Canvas: 4134 inches by 52 inches. Painted about 1555. Described by Waagen in Art Treasures of Great Britain, London, 1854, Vol. III., p. 18-19; by Crowe and Cavalcaselle in Titian, London, 1887, Vol. II., p. 151-152; by Champlin and Perkins, Cyclopedia of Painters and Painting, London, 1888, Vol TV... pe 338. Authenticated by Bernard Berenson. _ From the collections: Mariscotti, Rome; Camuccini, Rome; Buchanan, London; Earl of Darnley, Cobham Hall, Kent. Lent by Mr. Jules Bache, New York 20. Portrait oF A MAN WitH A FLUTE Canvas: 381% inches by 30 inches. Painted about 1560. Signed in the lower left corner “Titianus By Described and illustrated by Detlev Baron von Hadeln in The Burlington Magazine, November, 1926, p. 234; by Frank Jewett Mather in The Arts, December, 1926, p. 312.; by Walter Heil, Bulletin of the Detroit Institute of Arts, Vol. IX, No. 2. Catalogued in the Fifth Loan Exhibition of Old and Modern Masters, The Detroit Institute of Arts, October, 1927. From the collection of Baron von Stumm, Berlin. The Detroit Institute of Arts bey 21. PorTRAIT OF A Lavy. } : ‘Canvas: 37 inches by 27! inches. Painted about 1560. =e Described by Oscar Fischel in Ti . Stuttgart, 1927, p. 212 and 321; = schrift fur Bildende Kunst. Pest From the collections of Count S 1 von Nemes, Munich. ae Lent ay Mr. Max b 22. PoRTRAIT OF A Man (Fulvio Ors Canvas: 2734 inches by 34 “A inches Painted in 1561. soe and dated lower left: ee a From the voliseeane of Sir Hes Mead, Hayes, England; Charles Br ! England. | tf % a lie | \ } Wy 3 4 7496 i ae Set 2d »