| Support Type: | Wood Panel |
| Paint Type: | Tempera |
| Current Location: | Louvre Museum, Paris |
| Location History: | Commissioned for a wealthy Florentine aristocratic home, the masterpiece remained completely undocumented in private collections for nearly four hundred years. It finally resurfaced on the European art market in 1880, but Berlin museum curators turned it down because the wooden panel was severely scratched and weathered. Seeing past the surface damage to its profound artistic worth, the Musée du Louvre stepped in that very year to purchase the painting for its permanent collection. |
This work by Domenico is considered his best work for realism study. Here we see a scene rendered with high emotions and an eternal connection between two lives altogether in a single frame. Hence, this painting is subject to a double portrait. Further, one could feel the sense of a well-composed, quiet personal moment between a grandfather and his grandson as asserted in various sources, but at the same time, according to the artist, they are two unknown figures rendered with full emotions and a scene of intimacy. And the ultimate defining element of the painting is the nose of the old man, which shows the sign of a medical condition known as rhinophyma, in which overgrowth of tissue along with the oil glands makes it happen. Since this problem majorly happens in older men, Domenico has used this element very efficiently, highlighting the elderness in men’s portraiture. Furthermore, when the audience's eyes catch the moment in the facial expression of the small boy along with his action, one could analyse how fondly he snuggled the man referred to as his grandfather. Now, the iconographical aspect of the painting, where one could see the old man, is shown seated in a corner of a room alongside the window beside him, and through that window, a very beautiful scenic view has been rendered by Domenico. A soft entering the room could be felt, which also feels like an evening time further, the use of subtle red tone colour elevates the whole scenario in a moment, with the background contrast colour grey, complementing each other. Therefore, this painting of Domenico is a traditional Italian tempera artwork with a fine touch of Flemish painting conventions, with a structural intimacy along with refined realism, where the composition holds a warmth and balanced touch of Florentine Renaissance, acting as a source for cross-cultural art exchange between northern and southern European art practice.
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