The cryptic knot: Jacopo Pontormo’s portrait of Cosimo il Vecchio
The ‘Portrait of Cosimo il Vecchio’, circa 1519, marked the first Medicean portrait commission of the rising young Florentine artist, Jacopo Pontormo. Over the course of his career, Pontormo tended to avoid the use of common attributes in portraiture, instead investing character and meaning in the...
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Department of Art History, University of Birmingham
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doaj-49016a2c05774379a5665507284e73032020-11-25T01:43:03ZengDepartment of Art History, University of BirminghamJournal of Art Historiography2042-47522017-12-011717MHC1The cryptic knot: Jacopo Pontormo’s portrait of Cosimo il VecchioMary Hogan Camp 0The Morgan Library and MuseumThe ‘Portrait of Cosimo il Vecchio’, circa 1519, marked the first Medicean portrait commission of the rising young Florentine artist, Jacopo Pontormo. Over the course of his career, Pontormo tended to avoid the use of common attributes in portraiture, instead investing character and meaning in the elements of design (disegno). Though this portrait relies more heavily on traditional iconographic symbols to elicit character than some of his later portraits, even at this early stage, his use of line, colour and spatial characteristics inflect the work in original ways. And while the portrait is encomiastic, projecting the elder Cosimo’s princely status and his role as father and founder of a dynasty, visual cues modulate the overt themes of glorification and inevitability of rule that dominate the portrait, destabilizing its tone of authority. This essay explores these alternative readings of the iconography, and the reasons why they may be justified.https://arthistoriography.files.wordpress.com/2017/11/camp.pdfJacopo Pontormosixteenth-century Italian portraiturethe Medici familydisegnoiconographyNeo-Platonismvisual rhetoric |
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DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Mary Hogan Camp |
spellingShingle |
Mary Hogan Camp The cryptic knot: Jacopo Pontormo’s portrait of Cosimo il Vecchio Journal of Art Historiography Jacopo Pontormo sixteenth-century Italian portraiture the Medici family disegno iconography Neo-Platonism visual rhetoric |
author_facet |
Mary Hogan Camp |
author_sort |
Mary Hogan Camp |
title |
The cryptic knot: Jacopo Pontormo’s portrait of Cosimo il Vecchio |
title_short |
The cryptic knot: Jacopo Pontormo’s portrait of Cosimo il Vecchio |
title_full |
The cryptic knot: Jacopo Pontormo’s portrait of Cosimo il Vecchio |
title_fullStr |
The cryptic knot: Jacopo Pontormo’s portrait of Cosimo il Vecchio |
title_full_unstemmed |
The cryptic knot: Jacopo Pontormo’s portrait of Cosimo il Vecchio |
title_sort |
cryptic knot: jacopo pontormo’s portrait of cosimo il vecchio |
publisher |
Department of Art History, University of Birmingham |
series |
Journal of Art Historiography |
issn |
2042-4752 |
publishDate |
2017-12-01 |
description |
The ‘Portrait of Cosimo il Vecchio’, circa 1519, marked the first Medicean portrait commission of the rising young Florentine artist, Jacopo Pontormo. Over the course of his career, Pontormo tended to avoid the use of common attributes in portraiture, instead investing character and meaning in the elements of design (disegno). Though this portrait relies more heavily on traditional iconographic symbols to elicit character than some of his later portraits, even at this early stage, his use of line, colour and spatial characteristics inflect the work in original ways. And while the portrait is encomiastic, projecting the elder Cosimo’s princely status and his role as father and founder of a dynasty, visual cues modulate the overt themes of glorification and inevitability of rule that dominate the portrait, destabilizing its tone of authority. This essay explores these alternative readings of the iconography, and the reasons why they may be justified. |
topic |
Jacopo Pontormo sixteenth-century Italian portraiture the Medici family disegno iconography Neo-Platonism visual rhetoric |
url |
https://arthistoriography.files.wordpress.com/2017/11/camp.pdf |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT maryhogancamp thecrypticknotjacopopontormosportraitofcosimoilvecchio AT maryhogancamp crypticknotjacopopontormosportraitofcosimoilvecchio |
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