Artist: Titian (Tiziano Vecelli or Tiziano Vecellio known in English as Titian) (Italian, c. 1485-1576)
Title: St. Mark Enthroned
Medium: Antique engraving on wove paper after the original oil on panel by master engraver Conrad Geyer (German, 1816-1893) and Joseph Georg Pommer (Germna, 1815-).
Signature: Signed in the plate.
Dimensions: Image Size 5 1/8 x 8 3/8 inches.
Framed Dimensions: Approximately 14 x 17 inches.
Framing: This piece has been professionally matted and framed using all new materials.
St Mark sitting on an elevated throne, and below Saints Cosmas and Damina standing on the left, and Saints Sebastian and Roch standing on the right.
Titian was the greatest painter of 16th-century Venice, and the first painter to have a mainly international clientele. During his long career, he experimented with many different styles of painting which embody the development of art during his epoch.In a career that spanned more than seventy years, Tiziano Vecellio, called Titian in English, was the greatest force in Venetian Renaissance painting. Probably born around 1490 in the town of Cadore in the Italian Alps, Titian moved at an early age—perhaps as young eight or nine years old—to Venice to study art there. After training briefly with a mosaicist, he entered the workshop of Giovanni Bellini, the leading painter of his generation. Titian was influenced not only by Bellini’s rich color but by the lyrically elusive pastoral and mythological scenes of fellow Bellini pupil Giorgione. By 1510 Titian had established himself as an independent master, and after Bellini’s death he was appointed official painter to the Venetian Republic. Following a succession of commissions for the courts of Ferrara, Mantua, and Urbino, Titian’s fame spread internationally. His patrons included the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, Philip II of Spain, Francis I of France, and Pope Paul III. Titian was a master in all genres: he produced dignified and insightful portraits, Madonnas of modesty and charm, playfully joyous mythological pictures, sensuous nudes, and meditative religious works. He took from Bellini a typically Venetian approach to color, his early works often juxtaposing brilliant contrasting hues. After about 1530, the year of his wife’s death, Titian more often worked within a more narrow tonal range, using subtle glazes to create complex nuances of color. During the last twenty years of his life, Titian’s handling of paint grew looser, opening up a wider gamut of expressive possiblities. Thin glazes appear along with heavy impasto, each a mark of the artist’s own presence on the canvas. Titian died in 1576, as an outbreak of the plague roiled through Venice, but it is not known if he died of the disease. He was buried in Santa Maria Glorisa dei Frari, where his dramatic altarpiece, The Assumption of the Virgin, had been installed nearly sixty years before.