FINDART

Portrait of Diane-Gabrielle Damas de Thianges Mancini

Private collection

portrait

The Mazarinettes were the seven Italian nieces of Cardinal Jules Mazarin (1602-1661), hence this surname. They were the daughters of two of his four sisters. The cardinal had his nieces, two Martinozzi and five Mancini, come over from Italy at different times between 1647 and 1653, when they were all still fairly young, aged between six and thirteen.

Portrait of Diane-Gabrielle Damas de Thianges Mancini

About the Artist

Jacob Ferdinand Voet

16391700

Flemish painter who made his career in Rome in the second half of the 17th century. He was an expert portrait painter who combined solid Flemish professionalism with stylistic features from French and Italian Baroque portraiture. In the history of art, Voet was sinking into undeserved oblivion, until the 1930's. Little is known of Voet's early life in Antwerp. He arrived in Rome in 1663, probably via France. Voet became a much sought-after portrait painter to the Papal court and the Roman aristocracy. He was patronized by Queen Christina of Sweden, who was then resident in Rome, and painted her portrait as well as that of her friend, Cardinal Azzolino. Certain Englishmen who visited Rome on their Grand Tour, also commissioned Voet to paint their portraits. For Roman palaces, Voet painted entire Galleries of Beauties and rows of cardinals. His success in Rome ended in forced exile in 1678, for his brush was an instrument of wantonness. Voet went to France and finally returned to Antwerp. Voet specialized in half-length portraits, in which all attention is concentrated on the subject, who emerges from a neutral, dark background. He was a sophisticated master of his medium, painting with an effortless accuracy and a fluid ease. Voet's subjects tend to have a reflective, sometimes slightly anguished expression. Usually they have very striking, memorable eyes, always large and evocative, sometimes even startling, with a haunting look.

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