From
Supremacy and Survival:
My husband went with me last year to the Josephine exhibition at the Musée du Luxembourg.
One painting that caught my eye was the Portrait de Gian Girolamo
Grumelli dit “le Chevalier en rose”, 1561 by Giovan Battista Moroni. It
is now included in an exhibition of Moroni's portraits at the Royal Academy in London. Piers Baker-Bates reviews the exhibition for History Today:
Moroni excelled above all as a portrait painter and the
psychologically acute works on display at the Royal Academy should
cement his reputation, although, arguably, the few religious works shown
here are qualitatively on a par with the portraits. The exhibition
takes us chronologically through Moroni’s career and illustrates clearly
how his artistic trajectory developed. Particular attention has been
paid to the background and hang, which superbly set off the paintings
displayed.
He mentions le Chevalier en rose:
For example, take the portrait of Giovanni Gerolamo Grumelli, the
so-called Man in Pink (pictured above). Grumelli’s salmon pink,
elaborately trimmed, costume dominates the room in which his portrait
hangs. At the same time the cryptic motto of the sitter in the bottom
right corner of the painting is not written in his native Italian, but
in Spanish: Mas el çaguero que el primero (‘Better the latter than the
former’). It is the dramatic realism of such portraits that struck the
Victorians and that still impresses us today, as does Moroni’s ability
to depict fabrics and textures. (Read more.)
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