
Giovanni II Bentivoglio
Ercole de' Roberti·c. 1474/1477
Historical Context
Ercole de' Roberti's portrait of Giovanni II Bentivoglio (c. 1474-1477) depicts the de facto ruler of Bologna during the city's cultural golden age. Giovanni II Bentivoglio governed Bologna for over forty years, transforming it into a major center of Renaissance art and learning. Ercole de' Roberti was the most gifted painter of the Ferrarese school after Cosmè Tura and Francesco del Cossa, known for his intense, psychologically penetrating portraits. This portrait, likely paired with one of Giovanni's wife Ginevra, served both as a dynastic image and a demonstration of the Bentivoglio court's cultural sophistication.
Technical Analysis
Painted in tempera on poplar panel, the portrait displays the hard, linear precision and emotional intensity characteristic of the Ferrarese school, with a sculptural quality in the modeling of features that reflects the influence of Mantegna on Northern Italian painting.
Provenance
Acquired in Italy by Louis-Charles Timbal [1821-1880], Paris, before 1871;[1] sold 29 November 1872 with his collection to Gustave Dreyfus [1837-1914], Paris;[2] his heirs; sold 1930 with the entire Dreyfus collection to (Duveen Brothers, Inc., London, New York, and Paris); sold May 1936 to the Samuel H. Kress Foundation, New York;[3] gift 1939 to NGA. [1] The painting was attributed by Timbal to Piero, according to the list of art objects sold by Timbal to Dreyfus (copy of the list in NGA curatorial files, dated 29 November 1872). A provenance from the University in Bologna, as reported by Rosemarie Molajoli, _L'opera completa di Cosmé Tura e i grandi pittor ferraresei del suo tempo: Francesco Cossa e Ercole de' Roberti_, Milan, 1974: 98, and Fern Rusk Shapley, _Catalogue of the Italian Paintings_, 2 vols., Washington, D.C., 1979: 1:407, remains undemonstrated. Nor is it convincing to identify the NGA's painting and its pendant, _Ginevra Bentivoglio_ (NGA 1939.1.220), with likenesses mentioned by Antonio di Paolo Masini in the seventeenth century. Molajoli and Shapley (see above citations) stated that, according to Masini's _Bologna perlustrata_, Bologna, 1966: Part I, 213, there were portraits attributed to Cossa by Masini that fit the description of the NGA pair. The erroneous identification of the Gallery's portraits with those mentioned by Masini is repeated by Monica Molteni, _Ercole de' Roberti_, Milan, 1995: 129. Actually, the portraits discussed by Masini flanked the Madonna del Baraccano, an older work that Giovanni I Bentivoglio and Bente Bentivoglio had Cossa alter in the 1470s. Even supposing that Masini's passage somehow describes the NGA portraits, one must note that the male sitter is described as being eighteen years of age (far younger that Giovanni II's likeness in the NGA) and the directions the couple face do not correspond to Masini's description ("Bente vi fabricò un altare, ed a destra vi si fece ritrare al vivo in età d'anni 18 ed a sinistra la sudetta Donna, per mano del pittore Francesco Cossa..." ["Bente had an altar built there and to the right had himself portrayed at the age of 18 and at the left the earlier-mentioned woman, by the hand of Francesco Cossa"]). Furthermore, the whole passage by Masini is criticized for its inaccuracies and impossible dates by an editor of Giovanni Baruffaldi, _Vite de' pittori e scultori ferrarese_, 2 vols., Ferrara, 1844: 1:17-19. In short, there is no known provenance for the NGA's diptych from before the nineteenth century. [2] The provenance previous to 1872 is known from Fritz Harck, "Die Fresken im Palazzo Schifanoia in Ferrara," _Jb Berlin_ 5 (1884): 118; Wilhelm Bode, "Die Ausbeute aus den Magazinen der Königlichen Gemälde Galerie zu Berlin," _Jb Berlin_ 8 (1887): 126; and information on the back of a photograph in the Frick Art Reference Library, New York. [3] The Duveen Brothers letter confirming the sale of thirteen paintings and one sculpture, including NGA 1939.1.219 and .220, is dated 18 May 1936; the provenance is given as "Dreyfus Coll'n" (copy in NGA curatorial files; Box 474, Folder 5, Duveen Brothers Records, accession number 960015, Research Library, The Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles). See also The Kress Collection Digital Archive, https://kress.nga.gov/Detail/objects/937.
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