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Portrait of Giuseppe Poldi Pezzoli

Giuseppe Molteni , 1829

Description
Ritratto di Giuseppe Poldi Pezzoli di Giuseppe Molteni

The painting, made around 1830, depicts Gian Giacomo Poldi Pezzoli’s father, Giuseppe, then in his early sixties. At an already advanced age he had inherited from the two branches of his family, the Poldi of Parma and the Pezzoli d’Albertone of Bergamo, a considerable economic patrimony, consisting among other things of the noble seventeenth-century palace in Via del Giardino, today’s Via Manzoni. A man of secure economic substance, Poldi Pezzoli was to marry Gian Giacomo’s mother, Rosina Trivulzio, in 1819, whose noble family, even in the 18th century, could boast one of Milan’s finest art collections. Giuseppe, on the other hand, would never be a true collector: the purchases Giuseppe made for his home mainly involved furniture and furnishings, chosen without particular attention to artistic or antiquarian value.
In Giuseppe Molteni’s portrait, the Poldi Pezzoli is depicted in a sober and elegant manner. All attention is focused on the man, with his serious and thoughtful gaze, without any reference to his surroundings that somehow also reveals the social level to which he belongs. And yet the clothes, the chair on which he sits-still owned by the Museum-and the posture itself betray his upper middle-class origins. Giuseppe Molteni was a specialist in the genre: a renowned restorer as well as a painter, he was best known as a fashionable portraitist of the Lombard aristocracy and upper middle class. A sumptuous carved and gilded wooden frame frames Poldi Pezzoli’s portrait: its aristocratic opulence creates an effective contrast with the painting’s sobriety, giving the effigy a position of prime importance.

Data Sheet

Author

Giuseppe Molteni, 1800-1867

Date

1829

Material and technique

Oil on canvas

Measures

91 cm x 73 cm

Acquisition

Gian Giacomo Poldi Pezzoli bequest, 1879

Inventory number

0043
location
Fresco Room

The Fresco Room owes its name to the large ceiling fresco by Lombard painter Carlo Innocenzo Carloni, the Apotheosis of Bartolomeo Colleoni. The fresco, which comes from Villa Colleoni in Calusco d’Adda, was transferred to the Museum during postwar reconstruction work. On display in the showcase on the wall opposite the entrance is the magnificent Hunting Carpet, a unique example from northwestern Persia and dated 1542/1543. The room is also dedicated to hosting temporary exhibitions, lectures and conferences.

collection
Paintings

The Museum hosts over 300 paintings. Among them, many Italian works from the Renaissance: masterpieces from Tuscany (Botticelli, Piero della Francesca, Pollaiuolo), Lombardy (Luini, Boltraffio, Solario) and Veneto (Bellini, Mantegna). Important is also the group of 18th century Italian painting (Guardi, Canaletto, Tiepolo, Fra Galgario). In the collection, there are mainly portraits and small size paintings.

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