I love the portraits of Bronzino. He lived his whole life in Florence
(1503-1572) and was mainly the court painter for the Grand Duke of
Tuscany, who happened to be a very powerful Medici, so there are many
Bronzino portraits of the Medici family scattered throughout museums
around the world. I particularly like his portraits of women. They are
so finely done, rich and detailed and studying the faces of these
ladies, I can really see their personalities come through the paint. And
the jewelry.....holy 24 karats, Batgirl!
Let's just say Bronzino had embellishing down to, well , a fine art. (see what I did there?)
Here's how I started out....
I began with my usual routine of giving everything a good coat of gesso. Sigh....I do love gesso.
I wanted the Triptych-Tower Top to stand out in contrast with the color I was planning on using, so I painted everything that was going to show, black.
I
began playing with the layouts of the ladies, moving things around to
the spaces I felt they looked best, keeping in mind that there were
going to be a bunch of contrasting watercolor flowers behind them.
I also connected the back pieces together using my favorite linen hinging tape and painted it black.
i painted the back completely black after the front dried.
After
fussing around with composition some more, I decided that the black
background was a bit too heavy and needed some relief, so I painted the
top part of the black background gold where the pierced top of the
towers show through.
After
gluing down my cut-out images of the ladies and flowers to the back
side of the front frame, I then glued the whole shebang on to the
corresponding backs. I piled some weight on the piece to make sure they
dried flat.
I 'beefed up' the jewelry the ladies are wearing by using Liquid pearls
and adding flat back crystals. The I painted some gold detailing around
each frame, added some metal embellishments and gave it a good few hours
to dry well before I touched up any gold paint. i also made sure that
there were no bits of white peeking out the side of the piece and
touched up the black where I need to.
SUPPLIES:
Triptych-Tower Top
Additional supplies:
Acrylic paint
Gesso
Liquid Pearls
Bronzini Portraits
Floral collage sheets
Metals embellishments
Linen Hinging tape
Crystals
Thank you for stopping by!
Beautiful project Lora. Your work is always so crisp, clean and professional.
ReplyDeleteThey're gorgeous! I love Bronzino, too, and these frames really complement the portraits. The blonde on the left looks like the actress Lindsay Duncan (she's fab!).
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