The only clues about Bartolomeo Veneto's
life are the signatures, dates, and inscriptions on his paintings. Working
in the northern Italian regions of the Veneto and Lombardy, he began
as a painter of small, devotional paintings and developed into a fashionable
portraitist. He probably trained with Venetian master Gentile Bellini.
His earliest dated painting, a Virgin and Child, also shows the influence
of Giovanni Bellini's paintings of that subject. In his early career
Bartolomeo frequently copied and signed religious works by other painters
from northeastern Italy such as the Bellinis. Bartolomeo worked at the
Este court in Ferrara from 1505 to 1508, where he developed his style
in the rich culture of the Renaissance court there. By 1520 he was a
successful portrait painter in Milan, depicting fashionable young men
in contemporary costume. Leonardo da Vinci had revived portraiture there
and Bartolomeo's style displays Leonardo's influence. A strong chiaroscuro
gives structural coherence and a new psychological suggestiveness to
his paintings, as in the Getty Museum's Lady Playing a Lute. Bartolomeo's
sitters are characterized by elaborate costumes depicted in meticulous
detail. In his late work, softer, more fluid handling shows his awareness
of Titian's portraiture. |