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Lorenzo Costa, Portrait (supposed to be of Battista Fiera)

Key facts
Full title Portrait (supposed to be of Battista Fiera)
Artist Lorenzo Costa
Artist dates 1460 - 1535
Date made about 1490-5
Medium and support Oil on wood
Dimensions 51.4 × 38.7 cm
Acquisition credit Bequeathed by the Misses Cohen as part of the John Samuel Collection, 1906
Inventory number NG2083
Location Gallery B
Collection Main Collection
Portrait (supposed to be of Battista Fiera)
Lorenzo Costa
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The man in this portrait appears to have just turned away from the darkness surrounding him to take a look at us. His lips are slightly parted as though he might speak.

An inscription on the back of the panel names him as Battista Fiera, doctor at the court of Mantua as well as a poet, though we can’t be sure it’s him. Costa had become court artist in 1506 and the painting was once thought to have been made when their two residencies coincided. But the way that Costa has given shape and three-dimensionality to the man’s features is much closer to his painting style in the 1490s.

Fiera was interested in the city’s artists and artistic projects. He mentioned Mantegna (Costa’s predecessor as court artist) in a poem about the best way to represent the concept of justice in painting, and also wrote about his admiration for Costa.

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