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The universality of Titian’s genius is not questioned today, for he was surpassingly great in all aspects of the painter’s art. In his portraits he searched and penetrated human character and recorded it in canvases of pictorial brilliance.
During his long life, Titian's artistic manner changed drastically, [7] but he retained a lifelong interest in colour. Although his mature works may not contain the vivid, luminous tints of his early pieces, they are renowned for their loose brushwork and subtlety of tone.
This introductory essay addresses consistent factors in Titian’s practice, of which there are many, as well as changes as he grew older. These include the introduction of new materials such as smalt, a pigment that can lose its original blue colour.
This introductory essay brings together the observations made on the paintings examined – described in detail in the catalogue entries – in order to survey various aspects of Titian’s painting technique.
Jan 5, 2020 · Even when Titian was already an established, well-off artist in his sixties, he did not stop cultivating his painting style. In fact, according to historical sources, Titian became more perfectionist in his old age, keeping canvases for up to ten years at a time.
In 1511 Titian painted his celebrated frescoes in the ‘Scuola del Santo’ in Padua. His style had now reached maturity, marked by fullness of forms, compositional confidence and chromatic balance. These features made his work fundamental to the development of Venetian – and also European – painting.
Titian contributed to all of the major areas of Renaissance art, painting altarpieces, portraits, mythologies, and pastoral landscapes with figures. Titian trained under two other seminal Venetian artists, Giovanni Bellini (active by 1459, died 1516) and Giorgione (1477/78–1510).