- Ill-Matched Marriage
Infobox Painting|
image_size=350px
title=Ill-Matched Marriage("The Marriage Contract")
artist=Quentin Matsys
year=1525-1530
type=Oil on panel
height=54
width=89
height_inch=
width_inch =
museum=São Paulo Museum of Art ,São Paulo The "Ill-Matched Marriage" (also known as "The Marriage Contract") is an
oil painting executed by the early Netherlandish masterQuentin Matsys , usually dated between 1525 and 1530. The panel, probably inspired by a original lostdrawing ofLeonardo da Vinci , illustrates an appealing subject in thehistory of art : the marriage for economic reasons between persons of different ages. The painting is presently housed in theSão Paulo Museum of Art . It was donated to the museum in 1965, by theBaron Hans Heinrich Thyssen-Bornemisza .Context and iconography
The
marriage for economic reasons between persons of different ages has always been an appealing subject in the history of art, for being useful in the rendering of asocial critic of strong visual impact. Many artists such asGoya ,Leonardo da Vinci ,Dürer andLucas Cranach the Elder have dedicated works and studies to this subject. It is more common the representation of an old man marrying with a younger woman, oftenly led to matrimony by the interest of the family. Matsys himself made another version of this theme, in conformity with this iconographic tradition - currently housed in theNational Gallery of Art , in Washington. But in this "Ill-Matched Marriage" the opposite happens: a rich old woman marries a young man.The old title of this painting was "The Marriage Contract". The current title seems more adequate for its bigger precision and because the illustrated subject fully belongs to the
Renaissance iconography of the "Sposalizio Grottesco" ("Grotesque Marriage", in Italian), largely spreaded in the Italian painting of the 15th and 16th centuries.Matsys' narrative is solid and doesn't give occasion to doubts. Meanwhile being caressed by the young man, the old lady offers him a
wedding ring with her right hand and, at the same time, opens her bag, smoothed by the man's left hand. The mockery, hypocrisy and the foolishness temper of the scene is highlighted by the burlesque features of thecharacter s and, in particular, by the figure at the left, represented in the ambiguous act of putting inside a box the necklace spreaded on the table.The subject of the "grotesque marriage" is also present in the satirical
literature , as in thepoem "The Ship of Fools" bySebastian Brant (1494), which in its 52nd chapter, tackles about the "marriage-for-money" theme. The subject is resumed, brimful of mockery and humor, byErasmus of Rotterdam , in his "The Praise of Folly " (1509), specially in the 31st chapter, in which the great humanist considers the alternative case of rich old women marrying younger men, in a passage that, according to Luiz Marques, "could perfectly be a literal source for the panel in the São Paulo Museum of Art":
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