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Portrait of a Doge, probably Pasquale Malipiero

Gentile Bellini (Italian (Venetian), active in 1460, died in 1507)
about 1460-62

Medium/Technique Tempera on panel
Dimensions 53.3 x 42.5 cm (21 x 16 3/4 in.)
Credit Line Anna Mitchell Richards Fund
Accession Number36.934
CollectionsEurope
ClassificationsPaintings
This painting probably depicts Pasquale Malipiero, the doge—or head of government—of Venice from 1457 until his death in 1462. While the blue background, the scarlet cape, and red hat (a symbol of supreme authority) are badly abraded, the doge’s face and white cloth cap are well preserved. Part of a famous family of painters, Gentile Bellini became official painter of the Venetian state in 1474 and portrayed a number of doges—though this portrait dates to an earlier moment. Scholars have recently questioned whether a young artist would have depicted such an important sitter and have instead proposed that this may actually be an exceedingly rare work by Gentile’s father, Jacopo Bellini.

Provenance1860s or 1870s, probably purchased in Paris by Thomas Buckminster Curtis, Boston; by descent to his daughter-in-law, Fanny (Mrs. Louis) Curtis, Brookline, MA [see note 1]; given by Mrs. Curtis to the Morgan Memorial Cooperative Industries and Stores, Boston; 1936, sold by Morgan Memorial to the MFA for $20,000. (Accession Date: November 15, 1936)

NOTES:
[1] According to information provided to the MFA by Mrs. Curtis on April 6, 1937.