
Titian
1488–1576 · Republic of Venice · Venetian school
The story
Titian ran the busiest and most powerful painting workshop in 16th-century Venice, and he ran it for a very long time. Born around 1488 in the mountains north of the city, he took over as Venice's leading painter after Giovanni Bellini died, and confirmed it in 1518 with a towering altarpiece of the Virgin rising to heaven for the Frari church, its figures larger and more alive than anything the city had seen.
His reach went far beyond Venice. In 1530 he met the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, the most powerful man in Europe, and became his favoured portraitist. The story goes that the emperor once bent to pick up a brush Titian had dropped, an unheard-of gesture toward a mere painter. Charles made him a count, and his son Philip II of Spain kept Titian on for decades, commissioning a series of large mythological canvases of Greek gods and mortals that the painter shipped off to Madrid.
Titian worked into extreme old age, and his late paintings loosen almost to a blur, the paint dragged and smeared with fingers as much as brushes, so that up close they dissolve. He was still at it when the plague swept through Venice in 1576. It killed him that August, along with his son Orazio, and he was buried in the same Frari church that held his first great triumph. He was somewhere near 88.
Works
215 works
Portrait of Charles V with a DogTitian, 1533
Portrait of Clarissa StrozziTitian, 1542
Portrait of Isabella d'EsteTitian, 1535
Salome with the Head of John the BaptistTitian, 1515
The Flaying of MarsyasTitian, 1573
The Gypsy MadonnaTitian, 1510
The Worship of VenusTitian, 1518
Venus AnadyomeneTitian, 1520
Venus and AdonisTitian, 1554
ViolanteTitian, 1515
AnnunciationTitian, 1564
Portrait of Gerolamo (?) BarbarigoTitian, 1510
Portrait of Jacopo StradaTitian, 1567
The Crowning with ThornsTitian, 1542
DanaëTitian, 1560
Philip II in ArmourTitian, 1551
Portrait of a ManTitian, 1512
Portrait of Pope Paul IIITitian, 1543
The BravoTitian, 1520
The Crowning with ThornsTitian, 1570
The Death of ActaeonTitian, 1567
The Fall of ManTitian, 1550
The Three Ages of ManTitian, 1513
VanityTitian, 1515
Jacopo Pesaro, Bishop of Paphos, being presented by Pope Alexander VI to Saint PeterTitian, 1504