- Two Venetian Ladies
Infobox Painting|
title=Two Venetian Ladies
artist=Vittore Carpaccio
year=c. 1490
type=Oil on panel
height=94
width=64
city=Venice
museum=Museo Correr "Two Venetian Ladies" is a painting by the Italian Renaissance artist
Vittore Carpaccio .The painting, believed to be a quarter of the original work, was executed around
1490 and shows two unknown Venetian ladies. The top portion of the panel, called "Hunting on the Lagoon" is in theGetty Museum , and another matching panel is missing. The painting was formerly considered to show twocourtesan s. Modern art historians think them more likely members to be of the patricianTorella family, as suggested by their fine clothes and the pearl necklaces, but academic debate continues, as with other similar Venetian paintings of the period. [ [http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0142-6540%281993%2916%3A1%3C49%3ATLATLG%3E2.0.CO%3B2-E&size=LARGE&origin=JSTOR-enlargePage "The Lady and the Laurel: Gender and Meaning in Giorgione's "Laura", Anne Christine Junkerman, Oxford Art Journal, Vol. 16, No. 1 (1993), pp. 49-58] ] Several objects - the (white kerchief, thepearl s) and the animals (thedove s, Venus's bird) are symbols ofchastity . Note thechopine s, or platform clogs, on the left.Another painted panel, now in the
Getty Museum [http://www.getty.edu/art/gettyguide/artObjectDetails?artobj=801] , was published in 1944, and it was later realized that this is part of the same work, fitting above this part: it portrays several boats in a lagoon, and would explain the meaning of the scene, as two women awaiting their husbands' return after an expedition hunting, or fishing withcormorant s, in the Venetian lagoon. [http://www.getty.edu/art/gettyguide/artObjectDetails?handle=tech&artobj=801&artview=55515] Another panel the same size as these two combined would have been on the left; probably the two were hinged together to make adiptych , or a folding door or shutter. The Getty panel has an illusionistic letter rack painted on the back of the panel, which was presumably matched on this panel. This appears to be the earliest small-scaletrompe-l'œil painting since antiquity.References
* [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0PAL/is_499_158/ai_109131991 "Fishing with cormorants: a note on Vittore Carpaccio's Hunting on the lagoon"]
* [http://www.getty.edu/art/gettyguide/videoDetails?cat=6&segid=445 Getty video on how the two panels fitted together]
* [http://www.artonline.it/opera.asp?IDOpera=172 Page at artonline.it] it icon
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