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Nevertheless, the picture is uncritically circulated as the most famous portrait of Isabella d'Este, e.g. in books, probably because it is a Titian original (and the rest of the colour identifications are only copies). Isabella d'Este was so famous as 'Prima donna del Mondo' and fashion icon that nobles asked to be allowed to copy her dress. [11]
The Portrait of Isabella d'Este is a drawing (and possible painting) by Leonardo da Vinci which was executed between 1499 and 1500. It depicts Isabella d'Este, Marchioness of Mantua. During the Italian Wars of 1499–1504, the French invaded Italy which caused Leonardo to flee from Milan to Mantua.
Evidence in favor of Isabella as the subject of the famous work includes Leonardo's drawing 'Isabella d'Este' from 1499 and her letters of 1501–1506 requesting the promised painted portrait. [102] Further arguments focus upon the mountains in the background indicating the native origin of the subject, [ 103 ] and the armrest in the painting ...
As identifications of Isabella d'Este (1474-1539), three coloured portraits are exhibited in the Kunsthistorisches Museum. [6] The personal characteristics are contradictory (see graphic on the right): Ambras Miniature [7] (anonymous Mantuan artist in the 16th century), Isabella in Red (copy by Rubens c. 1605 after a lost original by Titian) and
Portrait d'Isabelle d'Este (Léonard de Vinci) Anges musiciens (National Gallery) Utilisateur:Crijam/archives Portrait d'Isabelle d'Este; Usage on it.wikipedia.org Dipinti di Leonardo da Vinci; Angeli musicanti (De Predis) Usage on ja.wikipedia.org 愛欲と純潔の戦い; イザベラ・デステの肖像 (ティツィアーノ)
By Leandro Ozzola, La Bella was published as Isabella d'Este, who is the mother of della Rovere's wife Eleonora (or his mother-in-law). [8] Exactly matching in time, her commission to Titian for a rejuvenating ideal portrait after an older model by Francesco Francia (1511) is documented by Isabella d'Este.
Isabella d'Este in the kingdom of Harmonia or Allegory of the coronation of Isabella d'Este, 1505, oil on panel, 164.5×197.5 cm, Paris, Musée du Louvre; Portrait of a woman with a dog, c. 1500, oil on panel, 45.5×35.1 cm, Royal Collection; Madonna and Child, [3] c. 1500, painting on panel, 71×55 cm, London, private collection
Portrait of Isabella d'Este by Leonardo da Vinci (1499–1500) depicts the Marchioness of Mantua, the proposed patron of La Scapigliata. A more widely accepted theory is that the work was commissioned by a known patron of Leonardo and a member of the Gonzaga family of Mantua, Isabella d'Este.