Perugino creates a fresco, Combat of Love …

Years: 1505 - 1505

Perugino creates a fresco, Combat of Love and Chastity, commissioned for the studiolo (cabinet) of Isabella d'Este, Marchesa of Mantua, in the Castello di San Giorgio, after the two canvasses by Andrea Mantegna, the Parnassus and the Triumph of the Virtues.

The paintings will be completed by Lorenzo Costa the Elder's Coronation of Isabella d'Este.

The subject had been suggested by Isabella's court poet, Paride da Ceresara, documented by the correspondence between Isabella and Perugino, who is at this time active in Florence.

The notary contract includes all the details about the literary theme, as well as a drawing on which the work has to be based.

For example, when Perugino painted a naked Venus, rather than dressed, the marchesa had protested vigorously.

When the painting is delivered in 1505, the marchesa is not entirely satisfied.

She declares that she prefers it would have been painted in oil, instead of the tempera used under her directives in order to follow Mantegna's style.

Perugino, who probably is not at ease with the small format of the painting, receives one hundred ducats for the work.

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