Profile Portrait of a Young Lady is a 1465 half-length portrait, made with oil-based paint and tempera on a poplarpanel, usually attributed to Antonio del Pollaiuolo,[1] although the owning museum, the Gemäldegalerie in Berlin, now describes this work as by his brother Piero del Pollaiuolo, and as one of its most famous paintings, and as one of the most famous portraits of women from the early Italian Renaissance.[2]
Description
The anonymous woman is depicted in a brocade dress, with her posture suggesting that she is sitting in the marble embrasure of a window or balcony, with her profile heightened by the bright blue sky in the background.[3] Her blonde hair is gathered under a light bonnet. The emphatic use of line and the clarity of the contrasting colour surfaces are typical features of the Florentine School.[3]
Similar profile portraits of high-status women in sumptuous clothing were painted to celebrate a marriage, but the absence of jewellery may indicate this portrait shows the subject shortly before rather than just after a wedding ceremony. The unusually rich bodice has a brocade of three colours, red, white and green, depicting pomegranates with foliage and palmettes, symmetrical about a central line of fasteners, with red velvet sleeves embroidered with gold thread.[4] The woman is sitting beside a balustrade inlaid with porphyry and jewels, similar to the balustrade depicted in the Cardinal of Portugal's Altarpiece at San Miniato al Monte in Florence, painted by Antonio del Pollaiuolo and his brother Piero del Pollaiuolo in 1466–67.[5]
In 1911, Adolfo Venturi attributed this work to Antonio del Pollaiuolo, and that attribution is still accepted as secure by most scholars, although a minority have suggested instead his brother Piero del Pollaiuolo. The Gemäldegalerie catalogue suggests that the varied experience of Antonio del Pollaiuolo working as a goldsmith, as a bronze maker, and as a designer of embroidery, makes him a likely candidate for the realistic depiction of the embroidered clothing in the portrait. However, Leopold Ettlinger suggested in 1963 and in a monograph on the Pollaiuolo brothers in 1978 that it should be treated as anonymous.