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The
painting was bequeathed to the "Galleria Buonarroti" by
Rosina Vendramin, the wife of the family's last direct descendant,
Cosimo. The subject of this amorous scene is not known. In the past
it has usually been interpreted as a death of Lucretia, but also as
a representation of Pompey supporting a swooning Cornelia. However,
this virtuous interpretation clashes with the detail of the man sliding
his hand under the woman's breast.
Numerous replicas of this composition are known, in public and private
collections: the one in Casa Buonarroti is the most famous, along
with the one in the English royal collections.
There has been long debate over the inventor of this popular scene:
the names of Giorgione, Sebastiano del Piombo, Pordenone, Romanino,
Paris Bordon, and Cariani have all been put forward, but the most
likely candidate still seems to be Titian, to whom by family tradition
Rosina Vendramin attributed the work in her possession. For stylistic
reasons, the original of the Titianesque composition has been dated
to around 1512.
In 1980 Mauro Lucco attributed the example in Casa Buonarroti to Paris
Bordon. |
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