
Cleveland Museum of Art
Justice
Giulio Romano
- Date
- 1530–34
- Medium
- pen and brown ink and wash within brown ink and red chalk framing lines
- Culture
- Italy
- Department
- Drawings
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
After working in Rome in the 1510s, Giulio Romano became the court artist to Federico II Gonzaga, 1st Duke of Mantua (r. 1530–40), where his universal talents as an architect, designer, and painter transformed the duke’s unadorned Palazzo del Te into an elaborate setting for leisure and courtly activity. It was through drawings that Giulio planned everything from the most important narrative sequences of the palace to the most seemingly insignificant ornamental details. This drawing is preparatory for the frescoed figure of Justice, which appears on the vaulted ceiling of the Camera di Attilio Regolo painted between 1530 and 1534. Justice appeared between narrative scenes that exemplified the moral virtue of ancient military leaders and of the duke. Giulio Romano was one of the most gifted students of the painter Raphael, under whom he worked to decorate the papal apartments at the Vatican in the 1510s.
The authoritative record is held by Cleveland Museum of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Cleveland Museum of Art and other institutions.

Design for a Frieze with a Putto and Acanthus Leaves
Cleveland Museum of Art

An Allegory of the Virtues of Federico II Gonzaga
Getty Museum

The Birth of Bacchus
Getty Museum

Justice
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Schenking van Constantijn
Rijksmuseum

Faith and Justice Enthroned
Getty Museum
Justice, plate 37 from Genii and Virtues
Art Institute of Chicago
Justice
Art Institute of Chicago

Birth of Bacchus
Getty Museum

Romeinse terechtstelling
Rijksmuseum

The Holy Family
Getty Museum

Victory, Janus, Chronos and Gaea
Getty Museum