
Portrait of a Girl
Historical Context
This 1508 portrait of a girl was painted during Sebastiano's Venetian period, reflecting the intimate portrait tradition that Giorgione and Giovanni Bellini had established. The gentle treatment of the young sitter demonstrates the poetic sensibility of early 16th-century Venetian portraiture. His figures carry Venetian sensuous richness combined with the overwhelming physical presence that Michelangelo's influence brought to his Roman works. Sebastiano del Piombo's portraits represent one of the most significant contributions to the genre in the sixteenth century, combining the Venetian colorist tradition in which he was trained (under Giorgione and Titian) with the Roman monumental figure style he absorbed through his close friendship and collaboration with Michelangelo. His portraits have a quality of monumental presence unusual in the portrait format: the sitters occupy their space with an authority derived from the sculptural weight of his figure painting. His ability to synthesize the two dominant traditions of Italian Renaissance painting — Venetian color, Roman form — made him one of the most distinctive portrait painters of his generation.
Technical Analysis
The portrait exemplifies the warm, atmospheric quality of Venetian painting, with soft modeling and luminous flesh tones that capture the youth and freshness of the sitter.
Look Closer
- ◆The girl's age is ambiguous — young enough to be unmarried but old enough for social meaning.
- ◆Sebastiano's warm, diffused light on the face has none of the sharp definition of northern.
- ◆The girl's direct gaze is unusual for female portraiture of this period.
- ◆The simple dark dress against a neutral background focuses the viewer's attention on the face.
See It In Person
More by Sebastiano del Piombo

Christ Carrying the Cross
Sebastiano del Piombo·c. 1515–17

Portrait of a Man, Said to be Christopher Columbus (born about 1446, died 1506)
Sebastiano del Piombo·1519

Portrait of a Young Woman as a Wise Virgin
Sebastiano del Piombo·c. 1510

Cardinal Bandinello Sauli, His Secretary, and Two Geographers
Sebastiano del Piombo·1516



