Titian - Portrait of Jacopo (Giacomo) Dolfin 1532

Tiziano Vecelli - Saint Jerome in Penitence 1531 Tiziano Vecelli - Supper at Emmaus 1531-1535 Tiziano Vecelli - Marriage with Vesta and Hymen as Protectors and Advisers of the Union of Venus and Mars. Allegory on Marriage 1532 Tiziano Vecellio - Portrait of Jacopo (Giacomo) Dolfin 1532 Tiziano Vecellio - Portrait of Emperor Charles V with dog 1532-1533 Titian - Portrait of Ippolito de Medici in a Hungarian Costume 1532-1533 Titian - Adoration of the Shepherds 1533
Titian, Tiziano Vecelli - Portrait of Jacopo (Giacomo) Dolfin 1532

Portrait of Jacopo (Giacomo) Dolfin 1532
108x91cm oil on canvas
Norton Simon Museum Pasadena, Pasadena, CA, United States
The image is only being used for informational and educational purposes

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From Norton Simon Museum Pasadena:
The most startling aspect of The Venetian Nobleman is the fact that it is painted over another fully finished and cut-down portrait of a seated man, possibly a cleric, with a beard. Seen in splendid clarity in the accompanying x-ray, the painting beneath is most likely by a different hand that several experts have suggested could be an unremarkable image by Leandro Bassano. This secondary portrait was discovered during a routine conservation study in 1978, and after the small window was opened to expose the eyes of the sitter, Mr. Simon suggested that it be exhibited as is. While the dating of the uppermost portrait is unclear, it is surely a studio version or later copy after the stunning Portrait of Giacomo Dolfin that Titian painted around 1531 and that was conveniently purchased in 1981 by the neighboring Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Except for the curtain that hangs behind the sitter in the “upper” Simon portrait, it and the LACMA canvas are nearly identical in size and composition. At some point in the painting’s history, the background of the LACMA portrait also had the same type of unfolded curtain that remains in the Simon picture, but it was removed during a conservation effort in 1980. The execution of the two paintings differs dramatically, however: the Simon portrait lacks Titian’s masterful handling of the powerful pyramidal figure seen in the sumptuously rendered LACMA work, as well as the potent,