Portrait of Francesca Gommi Maratti

Cleveland Museum of Art

Portrait of Francesca Gommi Maratti

Carlo Maratti
Date
c. 1701
Medium
Oil on canvas
Culture
Italy
Department
European Painting and Sculpture
Institution
Cleveland Museum of Art

In 1700 Carlo Maratti’s wife died, permitting him to marry his longtime mistress, Francesca Gommi, who began modeling for the artist in the 1670s and was the mother of his only child, Faustina. This painting was presumably painted shortly after the marriage as an homage from the artist to his new wife. To introduce an allegorical element into the composition, Maratti included a painting within a painting—in this case a drawing depicting Venus forging the love-darts of her adolescent son Cupid, suggesting that love will conquer all. The sitter holds a drawing representing Venus making Cupid's weapons, symbolizing the power of love to conquer all.

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