
Portrait of een vrouw uit Lübeck
Jacob van Utrecht·1512
Historical Context
Jacob van Utrecht created this portrait around 1512, now in the Department of Paintings of the Louvre. The work reflects the artistic production of the High Renaissance period, when workshops across Europe produced paintings for churches, courts, and private collectors. High Renaissance portraiture codified conventions — the three-quarter turn, neutral background or landscape, precise attention to dress and ornament — that signaled status and humanist cultivation for the sitter and their family.
Technical Analysis
The painting demonstrates the techniques and compositional approach characteristic of High Renaissance painting, with careful attention to the subject matter and the visual conventions of the period.






