
Giorgione
1478–1510 · Republic of Venice · High Renaissance
The story
Giorgione worked in Venice for barely a decade, roughly 1500 to 1510, and even his death is better documented than almost anything else about his life. In October 1510 Isabella d'Este, a noblewoman in Mantua who collected art aggressively, wrote asking her agent in Venice to secure a Nativity painting she had heard the artist owned. The agent wrote back that Giorgione had just died of the plague in a Venetian hospital, and the painting could not be found.
Barely half a dozen paintings can be reliably attached to his name, and telling his hand apart from that of his younger colleague Titian, who almost certainly trained alongside or under him, remains one of the oldest disputes in art history. Giorgione's Sleeping Venus was left unfinished at his death, its landscape completed afterward by Titian, and paintings like the Concert Champetre in the Louvre are still argued over between the two names.
What survives of Giorgione shows figures caught in soft, hazy light and mood, a way of painting Venice had not seen before him and one that Titian kept developing for the next 60 years.
Works
17 works
Sleeping VenusGiorgione, 1509
The TempestGiorgione, 1506
The Three PhilosophersGiorgione, 1500
JudithGiorgione, 1504
Castelfranco MadonnaGiorgione, 1500
Adoration of the ShepherdsGiorgione, 1507
LauraGiorgione, 1506
The Judgement of SolomonGiorgione, 1500
Old WomanGiorgione, 1506
Portrait of a YouthGiorgione, 1500
Self-portraitGiorgione, 1509
The Test of Fire of MosesGiorgione, 1505
Giustiniani PortraitGiorgione, 1503
Il Tramonto (The Sunset)Giorgione, 1508
Portrait of Francesco Maria della RovereGiorgione, 1502
Detroit TrioGiorgione, 1510
The Three Ages of ManGiorgione, 1504