BORDONE, PARIS


Meaning of BORDONE, PARIS in English

born 1500, Treviso, republic of Venice [now in Italy] died Jan. 19, 1571, Venice in full Paris Paschalinus Bordone Renaissance Venetian painter of religious, mythological, and anecdotal subjects. Bordone was a pupil of Titian but did not remain in his studio for long. He spent most of his working life in Venice, though he visited France and is also said to have visited Augsburg and worked for the Fugger family sometime in the 1540s. Most of his pictures cannot be dated with any certainty. Bordone painted many scenes of the Madonna and saints seated in a landscape, along with other religious subjects such as Christ Among the Doctors (Gardner Museum, Boston). His finest historical painting is Fisherman Consigning a Ring to the Doge (1540; Academy, Venice), which has typically bright colours, heavy Titianesque figures, and a sweeping landscape. Bordone's style gradually became more Mannerist, with warmer colours, tightly curled draperies, and figures in oddly tilted poses occupying the extreme foreground against a distant landscape. Though he continued to paint Holy Families in outdoor settings, late in his career he also painted a series of groups of blonde, statuesque female figures. Among these erotic paintings are Diana with Two Nymphs (State Art Collections, Dresden) and Venus with Flora (Hermitage, St. Petersburg). Bordone also painted portraits throughout his career.

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