Portrait of a young man
| Support Type: | Canvas |
| Paint Type: | Oil Paint |
| Current Location: | Metropolitan Museum of Art |
Pompeo Batoni was a celebrated Italian painter who specialised in portrait paintings. His art style was vivid and colourful with accurate body proportions. Through his series of portraits, he had grasped the fashion trends of his period. In "The Portrait of a Young Man", the subject is wearing a three piece French suit. His coat is a warm red and clearly a velvet piece. The wide cuffs are decorated with gold embroidery. Underneath the red coat he is wearing a silky white waistcoat with matching gold embroidery. The subject is wearing a pair of velvet breeches with vertical rows of golden buttons. He has white stockings on which are tucked in black leather shoes. The costume clearly appears customized and of rich quality. The sitter is dressed to the nines and is clearly ready for an occasion. This is made more clear by the powdered wig he is wearing-a sign of social status during that period. The unique attire was mandated by the French court and was thus worn by the aristocrats. While the sitter has not been identified, it can be presumed from his attire that he is French. The background is littered with items meant to show the man's intellectual prowess. Guides to ancient and modern Rome, painter's biographies and a relief sculpture of Antinous, the lover of Hadrian are shown. Batoni's patrons thus were the wealthy including the nobility of Poland, Portugal and Prussia. We can see influences of French Rococo and Bolognese Classicism in his works.
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