Laura (Giorgione)
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Portrait of a Young Bride (Laura) |
Giorgione, c. 1506 |
Oil on canvas transferred on wood |
41 × 33.5 cm |
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna |
Laura, formerly sometimes known as Portrait of a Young Bride is a painting by the Italian Renaissance master Giorgione, c. 1506. It is in the Kunsthistorisches Museum of Vienna, Austria.
Like Giorgione's other works, it is unsigned. An inscription on the reverse, accepted as early sixteenth century, identifies Giorgione as the painter and provides the date, making this the only work by the artist bearing a reliable date.[1] It may show a young bride backed by a branch of laurel (Laurus), symbol of chastity, and carrying the nuptial veil. The gesture of opening the fur mantle to uncover the bosom indicates fecundity (and, therefore, maternity), as an offer of love and seduction. Alternatively the figure is a courtesan—certainly many of the paintings in the Venetian tradition the Laura inspired were of figures to be read as courtesans, often posing as a mythological figure or the personification of an abstract quality.[2]
It is one of the less controversial attributions to Giorgione.
This work marked the abandonment of Giovanni Bellini's models by Giorgione, to embrace a Leonardesque style.
[edit] Notes
[edit] References
- Brown, D. A., Ferino Pagden, S., Anderson, J., & Berrie, B. H. (2006). Bellini, Giorgione, Titian, and the Renaissance of Venetian painting. Washington: National Gallery of Art. ISBN 0300116772