Portrait Miniature of Beatrice Cenci Charles Richard Bone, 1842 After Guido Reni The Victoria & Albert Museum |
The remarkable vibrancy of this painting from 1842 owes to the fact that it was painted in enamel on metal. Enamel, more so than traditional miniature painting (watercolor painted on vellum or ivory) was preferable as a medium in as much as it does not fade when exposed to light. However this technique does not allow the freedom that watercolor does. The V&A describes it best, “The process of painting with enamels is, however, less free than the miniature technique and is fraught with danger. The first colors to be laid on the metal support have to be those needing the highest temperature when firing. More color is added and the enamel re-fired, the process ending with the colors needing the lowest temperature.” Furthermore, due to the intensive labor associated with the technique, this was a far more expensive option that the usual choices.
This is actually an enamel copy of an earlier portrait by Guido Reni. Charles Richard Bone, grandson of artist Henry Bone, and son of the celebrated Henry Pierce Bone, has taken great pains to recreate Reni’s portrait of Beatrice Cenci, an Italian noblewoman who was famously at the center of a lurid, Sixteenth-Century Roman murder trial.
No comments:
Post a Comment