
Lady with a book of Petrarch's rhyme
Andrea del Sarto·1528
Historical Context
This 1528 portrait of a lady with a book of Petrarch's poetry is one of Andrea del Sarto's most celebrated female portraits. The inclusion of a Petrarchan text connects the sitter to the refined literary culture of Renaissance Florence, where Petrarch's sonnets shaped ideals of beauty, love, and female virtue. Andrea del Sarto, active in Florence from around 1506 until his death in 1530, was among the most accomplished painters of the Italian High Renaissance. His synthesis of the dominant Florentine tradition — Leonardo's atmospheric modeling, Raphael's compositional grace, Michelangelo's figure authority — achieved a quality of technical perfection that earned him Vasari's famous epithet "the faultless painter." Working primarily in Florence, he produced altarpieces, frescoes, and devotional panels for the city's churches, religious confraternities, and private patrons, training in his workshop the painters who would become the founders of Florentine Mannerism.
Technical Analysis
The portrait demonstrates Andrea's refined naturalism, with the warm palette and soft modeling characteristic of his late style, while the open book provides both a compositional element and an insight into the sitter's cultural world.
Look Closer
- ◆The book the sitter holds is open at a specific page — the lines of text are rendered in abbreviated script, making the literary identity of the volume visible but not legible.
- ◆Her gaze is directed slightly to the viewer's right — an alert, thoughtful regard that avoids the directness of formal portraiture.
- ◆Andrea del Sarto renders the sitter's sleeve fabric in rich sienna and deep umber — a texture of woven silk that Florentine patrons would have recognized and valued.
- ◆A distant landscape is visible through a window behind the figure — Venetian-influenced background recession in a Florentine portrait.
- ◆The Petrarchan book is placed prominently — almost as large as the face — an unusual compositional choice that makes the literary attribute equal to the sitter's identity.
See It In Person
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