Giovanni Battista Moroni, a Venetian-born pupil of …

Years: 1578 - 1578

Giovanni Battista Moroni, a Venetian-born pupil of the local painter Moretto da Brescia, who strongly influenced Moroni's manner in painting religious compositions, is one of the few Italian artists to have made portraiture their chief specialty.

His portraits are mostly of the petty aristocracy and bourgeoisie of Bergamo.

The Tailor (circa 1571; National Gallery, London) is one of his best-known works.

Moroni emphasizes a sitter's dignity and nobility by means of natural, unforced poses and masterful compositions.

Despite their impassive facial expressions, many of his portraits impart a sense of gentle melancholy that is reinforced by predominantly gray tonalities and by a restrained treatment of the textures of cloth and draperies.

Moroni's simple yet subtle style of portraiture is clearly influenced by that of Titian, who himself has commended Moroni's work.

Among Moroni's other more notable portraits are the Portrait of a Young Man (Brera Picture Gallery, Milan) and the Portrait of a Gentleman (1563; Uffizi Gallery, Florence).

Moroni dies in Bergamo on February 5, 1578, in his early fifties.

Giovanni Battista Moroni: Titian's Schoolmaster (c. 1575)oil on canvas, 96.8 x 74.3 cm (38 1/8 x 29 1/4 in.) Widener Collection

Giovanni Battista Moroni: Titian's Schoolmaster (c. 1575) oil on canvas, 96.8 x 74.3 cm (38 1/8 x 29 1/4 in.) Widener Collection

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