passer le menu
Musée du Louvre logo, louvre.fr homepage

Overview
Curatorial Departments
Near Eastern Antiquities
Egyptian Antiquities
Greek, Etruscan, and Roman Antiquities
Islamic Art
Sculptures
Decorative Arts
Paintings
Introduction
Selected Works
Latest Acquisitions
Traveling Works
Works in Focus
Bibliography
Timeline
Maps
Research Centers
Prints and Drawings
Kaleidoscope
Databases


Home - Collection - Curatorial Departments - Paintings - Selected Works - Italian Painting

Paintings : Italian Painting

Tiziano VECELLIO, known as TITIAN (Pieve di Cadore, 1488/1490 - Venice, 1576)
Woman with a Mirror
1512-15
© Musée du Louvre/A. Dequier - M. Bard
Enlarge (new window)
Technical information
Tiziano VECELLIO, known as TITIAN (Pieve di Cadore, 1488/1490 - Venice, 1576)
Woman with a Mirror
1512-15
Oil on canvas
H. 99 cm; W. 76 cm
Louis XIV Collection
INV. 755
Paintings
Interactive floor plans
Author(s)
Aline François
first pageprevious page... 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 ...next pagelast page
Back to list Send to a friend (new window) Print (new window)
Add to My Album
 

Woman with a Mirror


Description

A classical composition


Titian has pictured this sensuous young Venetian woman daydreaming at her toilet, holding her rope of hair in one hand and a perfume bottle in the other. She is standing, face-on, and is wearing a green dress with shoulder straps and a loose pleated white blouse which is open, revealing her left shoulder. A bearded man in a red doublet is holding two mirrors for her, one in front and the other behind. The painting is tightly focused on the two figures, which fill the entire space. The classical layout is particularly clear thanks to the harmonious way the forms echo each other. For example, the young woman's oval face and the round mirror echo the curving lines of her unclothed arm, right sleeve, plump shoulders, and generous décolleté.

A hymn to the beauty of Venetian women


While in this work Titian is still close to his master Giorgione in the use of the mirror and the trompe-l'oeil shelf the woman's hand is resting on, he is already distancing himself from the master in his use of a rich palette of bright colors and in the subtle play of light and shade, particularly the red garment worn by the man standing in the shadows. The work, painted while Titian was still a young man, reveals his interest in painting female portraits - he produced several such between 1510 and 1520. The young woman is leaning her head slightly to one side, and this, together with her blue eyes, pale complexion, bare shoulders, and loose, wavy, blonde hair, make her an idealized representation of Venetian beauties of the early 16th century. This fashionable theme also inspired a number of other artists, including Palma, Bordoni, and Savoldo.


first pageprevious page... 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 ...next pagelast page
Back to list Back to top

Thematic Trail

Italian Renaissance Painting
While the great European powers battled for control of Italy, Italian fifteenth- and sixteenth-century artists broadened the field of Western painting.

All the thematic trails

Atlas Database

Base Atlas
© Musée du Louvre
Collection databases
View many of the 35,000 works on display, and consult the relevant technical information and accompanying commentaries by curators.

Resources

Explore the history of art and civilizations in the sections In-Depth Studies and A Closer Look. The Magazine takes a fresh, unconventional look at the museum and its collections.
In-depth studies
A closer look
Parallel