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Männliches Doppelbildnis des Scipio Glusona und Jacomo Tento (Zwerg) by Jacopo Tintoretto

Männliches Doppelbildnis des Scipio Glusona und Jacomo Tento (Zwerg)

Jacopo Tintoretto·1561

Historical Context

This painting from 1561 by Jacopo Tintoretto exemplifies Jacopo Tintoretto's distinctive contribution to the Renaissance period. Painted during the later Renaissance period, the work showcases the artist's characteristic technique, reflecting the creative ambitions of Italian painting at a significant moment in the artist's development. Jacopo Tintoretto spent his entire career in Venice producing an enormous body of work for the city's churches, confraternities, and state institutions. His synthesis of Titian's color with Michelangelesque figure power, achieved through an intense study method involving small wax models lit with dramatic sidelighting, produced a style of unprecedented dramatic intensity. His sustained productivity across five decades and his ability to maintain the highest quality of pictorial invention across the largest decorative programs in Venetian art make him one of the defining figures of the late Italian Renaissance.

Technical Analysis

Executed with skilled technique and attention to careful observation, the work reveals Jacopo Tintoretto's characteristic approach to composition and surface. The treatment of light and the careful modulation of color create visual richness within a unified pictorial scheme.

Look Closer

  • ◆Notice the unusual double portrait format that presents both a full-sized figure and a dwarf companion.
  • ◆Look at Tintoretto's characteristic psychological directness applied to an unconventional portraiture subject.
  • ◆Observe how the painting documents a social relationship unusual in Renaissance portraiture — the patron and his dwarf.
  • ◆The contrast between the two figures creates compositional tension that Tintoretto exploits with characteristic visual intelligence.
  • ◆Find how the two sitters regard the viewer differently, creating a double psychological encounter within the single frame.

See It In Person

Munich Central Collecting Point

Munich, Germany

Visit museum website →

Quick Facts

Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
124 × 149 cm
Era
Mannerism
Style
Mannerism
Genre
Portrait
Location
Munich Central Collecting Point, Munich
View on museum website →

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Tarquin and Lucretia by Jacopo Tintoretto

Tarquin and Lucretia

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Saint Helen Testing the True Cross by Jacopo Tintoretto

Saint Helen Testing the True Cross

Jacopo Tintoretto·c. 1545

Doge Alvise Mocenigo (1507–1577) Presented to the Redeemer by Jacopo Tintoretto

Doge Alvise Mocenigo (1507–1577) Presented to the Redeemer

Jacopo Tintoretto·probably 1577

The Finding of Moses by Jacopo Tintoretto

The Finding of Moses

Jacopo Tintoretto·1560s?

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The Battle of Zama by Cornelis Cort

The Battle of Zama

Cornelis Cort·After 1567

Francesco de' Medici by Alessandro Allori

Francesco de' Medici

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Portrait of Don Juan of Austria by Alonso Sánchez Coello

Portrait of Don Juan of Austria

Alonso Sánchez Coello·1559–60

Portrait of a Seated Woman by Antonis Mor

Portrait of a Seated Woman

Antonis Mor·c. 1565