Son of Lucas Cranach the Elder, the artist trained in his father’s studio, as did his elder brother Hans. Both followed their father’s style. The present portrait depicts a young woman against a vivid, plain blue background in slightly over half-length format. The increasing amount of the sitter’s body included in the image indicates the evolution in portraiture that was taking place at this period.

Cranach the Younger reveals his mastery in the depiction of small details such as the hairnet of pearls that covers the young woman’s hair, her rings, belt and choker. Her sumptuous clothes, trimmed with fur and embellished with numerous jewels, indicates that she is a woman of aristocratic status or perhaps a leading figure at court. The letters “ABON” on her clothing have been read as “A bona fide”, referring to her honesty and obligations. The majority of portraits of this type were executed for a particular occasion such as a matrimonial alliance and this panel may have been commissioned as an individual image or as a pair to another panel. The sitter’s pose, turned slightly to the left, has led art historians to suggest that it had a pair in the form of a male portrait of the same year that is now in the São Paulo Museum (Brazil).

MGA

16th Century16th Century - Germanic paintingPaintingOilpanel
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