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Images of the collection in the Uffizi Gallery.
Portrait Maddalena Doni
c. 1504-1507
Oil on basswood panel
Raffaello Sanzio (Urbino 1483 – Rome 1520) and Maestro di Serumido
"The two paintings portray Agnolo Doni (1474-1539), a rich fabric merchant and prominent figure among the Florentine upper class, and his wife, noblewoman Maddalena Strozzi (1489-1540), who married on 31 January 1504. According to Giorgio Vasari (Le Vite, Edizione Giuntina 1568) the works were commissioned to Raphael by Agnolo: “Whilst he was living in Florence, Agnolo Doni, who was very careful with his money in other things but willing to spend it, although still with the greatest possible economy - on works of painting and sculpture, in which he much delighted, asked him [Raphael] to make portraits of himself and of his wife; these may be seen in the possession of Giovan Battista, his son, in the beautiful and most comfortable house of Agnolo, on Corso de’ Tintori, near the Canto degli Alberti, in Florence.” Agnolo also commissioned the round painting of the Holy Family, known as the Tondo Doni, to Michelangelo Buonarroti. Both portraits were painted en pendant and originally formed a diptych, held together by hinges that made it possible to look at the scenes painted on the backs. These are two episodes, one a consequence of the other, taken from Ovid’s Metamorphoses: The Flood, on the back of Agnolo’s portrait, and the following rebirth of humanity thanks to Deucalion and Pyrrha, on the back of the portrait of Maddalena. These stories, painted in monochrome, were the work of a colleague of the young Raphael, whose identity remains anonymous but who is thought to be the so-called Maestro di Serumido, a figure identified by Federico Zeri, who attributed a group of works in similar style to this same artist. The choice to paint the works in black and white reflects a taste for the Flemish styles that were popular in 15th- and 16th-century Florence, where the panels of diptychs and triptychs would traditionally have monochrome decorations on the back. The two scenes are to be interpreted as allegories that seem to wish fertility to the marriage. Ovid narrates how the gods allowed Deucalion and Pyrrha, an elderly couple without children to save themselves from the flood and to restore life to mankind after it. On the order of Zeus, the pair threw stones over their shoulders, and once they touched the oil, the stones became people – the ones thrown by Deucalion became men and the ones thrown by Pyrrha, women. These references strengthen the theory, put forward by the majority of critics, that the portraits were commissioned for the marriage of the young couple, dating them to somewhere between 1504 and 1506, the year in which the furniture for the Donis’ marriage chamber was completed by Francesco del Tasso and Morto da Feltre.
The first of the portraits by Raphael was that of Maddalena: radiographic analysis has shown that he made changes to background, initially conceived to be an interior, so that it overlooked a landscape through a side opening, while the portrait of Agnolo was directly inserted into the landscape, creating visual continuity with that of his bride. These two masterpieces mark an essential stage not only in Raphael’s art, but also in the tradition of Florentine portraiture which, by developing solutions previously formulated by Verrocchio in the Woman with Flowers, and by Leonardo in the Mona Lisa, come to a new natural style of half-bust presentation. The links to the Mona Lisa are so close as to lead one to think that Raphael was himself able to study it in Florence, at least towards the end of 1504. Raphael distances himself from Leonardo’s model by preferring to use a solid, clear approach to space, lowering the horizon behind the figures and bringing them strongly to the foreground, according to models influenced by his own teacher, Pietro Perugino and by the Flemish painters of the late 15th century, such as Hans Memling. The fascinating use of the sfumato technique, as seen on the Mona Lisa has been replaced by an absolutely clear use of shape and colour, by a descriptive language that pauses on the detailed portrayal of the faces, fabrics and jewels. Maddalena’s pendant is particularly significant, formed by a gold, unicorn-shaped mount and three precious stones (ruby, emerald and sapphire), and by a pearl, an element that alludes to virginal purity and marital fidelity.
In Vasari’s period, the portraits were still in the family home in Corso Tintori, where they were seen by Raffaello Borghini (1584) and Giovanni Cinelli (1667). From this date, there is not much information about them. They most definitely remained with the Doni family if, in 1826, Leopold II Grand Duke of Tuscany was able to buy them from the heirs and add them to the collection of paintings he was creating in the Palatine Gallery in Palazzo Pitti. Since 5 June 2018, the Doni portraits have been displayed in the Uffizi Galleries alongside Michelangelo’s Tondo Doni, hung on new supports that allow the stories on their reverse sides to be admired."
The Uffizi Gallery
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Five Fleur de Lis Talisan Necklace by Pyrrha (right
In Latin, this seal reads Virtue is Its Own Reward. The Fleurs De Lis are a sign of European royalty, representing light and life.
Size is approx 1¼”
Dagger Talisman Necklace by Pyrrha (left)
In French this seal reads Courage sans Peur, which means Courage Without Fear.
This is Gandalf sitting in my computer chair preventing me from getting
any work done. He seems to think of himself as "the mighty hunter" who
defends us from all kinds of spiders, roaches, rodents, etc. but he
spends more time resting than hunting. If you scratch his chin he'll
smile and show you his fangs! My family rescued him along with his
partner-in-crime Pyrrha in the summer of 2003, a few months after my
beloved Luna (a prior rescue kitty) died of a sudden illness. Gandalf
and Pyrrha were rescued at the Animal Shelter in Warner Robins, GA. My
husband saw that I was still depressed over Luna's death and took me to
go rescue one new kitty and we brought home 2! Gandalf had just been
taken off the streets and had technically not been there long enough to
be adopted, but the kitties had to be spayed and neutered before we
could take them home, and by the time that was done Gandalf was legally
adoptable. Gandalf had obviously been living and eating "by his wits" on
the streets. He was so skinny, scrawny, and scarred and scratched that
the shelter staff thought I was nuts wanting to adopt him! He even had a
small BB pellet embedded under his skin from prior abuse. (The BB is
still there, the vet didn't see any reason to put Gandalf through the
pain and suffering of surgery when it didn't seem to be bothering him,
so there it remains, benign but a reminder of his prior abuse) To me and
my husband, it was obvious that under the scraggly pelt and scars was a
beautiful friendly loving cat. Gandalf also was obviously a full grown
tomcat, very paternal in his kitty way, exactly what our half-wild other
adopted kitty at home needed to keep her in check! Well, needless to
say, Gandalf has filled out and the scars are invisible under his full
thick fur, and he does a good job of keeping the other kitties in-line!
I haven't located good photos of my other rescue cat Luna, but there is
a "spitting-image" of her on my Tribe page.
Marie