Portrait of Christina of Denmark

Possibly Jacopo Tintoretto / Formerly attributed to Titian · PD

Portrait of Christina of Denmark


Details

Year
1556
Medium
oil paint
Type
painting
Dimensions
110 × 83 cm

The story

For a long time this severe woman in black was thought to be a Titian. Scholarship has since moved the portrait to the younger Venetian Jacopo Tintoretto, though it still carries the weight of that older name. It shows Christina of Denmark, a Danish king's daughter who became Duchess of Milan and then of Lorraine, and who as a teenage widow was once floated as a bride for Henry VIII of England. By about 1556, when this was painted, that match was long past and she was widowed again, running a small court of her own. The picture belonged that same year to Mary of Hungary, the Habsburg regent who governed the Netherlands for her brother the emperor, and it hung in her collection long before its journey to Belgrade.

Portrait of Christina of Denmark — Jacopo Tintoretto — MuseScope