| 
	
 | 
 
  
  
 
	
   	  
		| The First Art Newspaper on the Net | 
		
		      | 
		Established in 1996  | 
        	  | 
 Tuesday, November 4, 2025 | 
 
	 
 
	
     
      
      
 
 
 
	 |  
	| Timken Museum unveils "Poetic Portraits," featuring Sofonisba Anguissola's Renaissance masterpiece |  
	 |  
	 |  
	 
		
		Sofonisba Anguissola, Giovanni Battista Caselli, Poet from Cremona, 1557-58. Oil on canvas, 30.6 x 24.2 inches (P008110) Madrid, Museo Nacional del Prado © Photographic Archive Museo Nacional del Prado.
		 
        
 
 
							
	
	 |  
	
    	
	
		
					
        
        
						
                        
					 
        
	
					
					
SAN DIEGO, CA.-  The Timken Museum of Art unveils Poetic Portraits: Allegory and Identity in Sixteenth-Century Europe, a landmark exhibition exploring the rich interplay of art, literature, and identity during the Renaissance. On view from November 3, 2025, through March 29, 2026, this exhibition brings together more than a dozen exceptional images that trace the impact of sixteenth-century art on ideas about portraiture. At the heart of Poetic Portraits is a masterwork by Sofonisba Anguissola, one of the most celebrated women artists of the Renaissance. Her Portrait of Giovanni Battista Caselli, on loan from the Museo Nacional del Prado in Madrid, anchors the exhibition and is shown in the United States for the first time at the Timken. The portrait is a commanding image of the Italian poet and scholar, distinguished by Anguissolas remarkable attention to psychological depth and expressive realism.
  
 We are honored to present this extraordinary work in San Diego, said Megan Pogue, the Timkens Executive Director. Poetic Portraits continues the Museums  commitment to connecting audiences with works that transcend time and place. This exhibition offers visitors a unique lens into humanist perspectives of the Renaissancewhere art and intellect, poetry and portraiture, merged to express new ideas about identity. 
 
 A Renaissance of Ideas and Expression 
 
 During the sixteenth century, portraiture evolved beyond mere likeness. Artists, poets, and patrons alike sought to convey the virtues, intellect, and ambitions of their subjects through a sophisticated visual language of symbols, allegories, and gestures. The exhibition reveals how these layered meanings reflected the ideals of the Renaissance and the expanding role of art in European society. 
 
 Accompanying Anguissolas portrait are select loans from important collections, including rare works from the University of San Diegos remarkable print collection, as well as key paintings from the Timkens own stellar holdings of Renaissance art. Seen together, these works illuminate how painters and printmakers intertwined realism with allegory to capture not only the external features of their subjects but also their social standing, moral character, and intellectual pursuits. 
 
 As Derrick R. Cartwright, Ph.D., Director of Curatorial Affairs, explained: Renaissance portraits were never just faces. They were complex statements about identity and ambition, representations of affiliation, and status. Artists like Sofonisba Anguissola and Giovanni Antonio Boltraffio used symbols, gestures, and even costumes to transform their sitters into embodiments of virtue, intellect, or poetic talent. By revisiting these works, we gain insights into how art served as both mirror and metaphor for the Renaissance mind. 
 
 An exemplary case in the exhibition is Boltraffios Portrait of a Youth Holding an Arrow, painted around 1500. The inclusion of an arrow and a wreath of laurel leaves link the sitter to the allegory of poetryan artistic choice that transforms the portrait into a meditation on creative inspiration. Renaissance audiences understood such symbolism instinctively, reading these works much like the verses and sonnets they admired. 
 
 The Rediscovery of Sofonisbas Gentleman 
 
 The Timkens presentation celebrates not only Anguissolas talent but also the remarkable story that exists behind her portrait of Caselli. Depicting an older man surrounded by books, scientific instruments, and devotional objects, the painting offers a vivid sense of an intellectual deeply engaged with faith and reason. Historical evidence confirms that Caselli was himself a polymathboth poet and sculptorand a distinguished citizen of Cremona, Italy. 
 
 Over the centuries, however, the sitters identity was obscured. By the seventeenth century, the painting had migrated to Milan; by the eighteenth, it was owned by the Spanish painter José de Madrazo. At some point, the figures scholarly attire was painted over with a dark cloak, and the portrait was misidentified as a depiction of Saint Peter. Only through recent research and conservation at the Prado was the sitters actual identity restored. 
 
 The story of this painting is as fascinating as the portrait itself, noted Dr. Cartwright. It invites us to think about how artworks move around and their interpretations shift over timehow meaning is layered, lost, and recovered through scholarship. Sofonisbas portrait of Caselli is not only a marvel of artistic technique but also a testament to the endurance of human identity across centuries. 
					 
 
	
	
    
				
    
					
	
	
			     
	   | 
     
	
 
 
 | 
   
 
 
 
 
 
    
 
 
	Today's News
  
November 4, 2025
  
Cycladic II Greek marble idol of paramount importance leads Artemis Fine Arts' Nov. 6 auction
  
Bellmans' November Auctions include sparkling highlights
  
Miller & Miller firearms auction totals $259,453 as Colt Navy pistols lead the sale
  
Einstein manuscripts, JFK gift, and Woodrow Wilson baseball lead University Archives' November 19 auction
  
Christie's Hong Kong Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art achieves US$19M
  
Jorge M. and Darlene Pérez donate 36 works to Tate by artists from Africa and the African diaspora
  
Worth its weight in gold? Maurizio Cattelan's America comes to auction
  
Legendary F1 memorabilia from Schumacher, Senna, Hamilton & Verstappen hits the auction block
  
Thyssen-Bornemisza brings together Warhol and Pollock in landmark exhibition
  
Rembrandt's $15-20M Young Lion Resting from the Leiden Collection to be sold to benefit wild cat conservation
  
A magnificent new pink diamond comes to auction at Sotheby's - The Glowing Rose - In the region of $20 million
  
Exhibition at Passerelle Centre d'art contemporain unfolds the infinite layers of maritime memory
  
Kunsthalle Mannheim presents its 2026 exhibitions
  
Exhibition at MAK redefines the book as a medium of art, memory, and imagination
  
Museion presents the first monographic publication dedicated to Lucia Marcucci
  
Erika Somogyi blooms in her third solo exhibition at Kristen Lorello Gallery
  
Record attendance and a dynamic market at OFFSCREEN
  
Timken Museum unveils "Poetic Portraits," featuring Sofonisba Anguissola's Renaissance masterpiece
  
Phillippe Druillet Métal Hurlant cover nets $162,500, leading Heritage's international comic art auction 
  
Tarik Kiswanson: The Relief on view at Institut suédois
  
The Carle serves up "Cooking with Eric Carle," a tasty look at the beloved author's art and appetite
  
Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation introduces new Curatorial Fellowship
  
 | 
    
 
	 | 
 
 
	
		
			 |  
			
  |  
			 |  
			
			 Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,  Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,  Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week,  . |  
			 |  
			
  |  
			 |  
		 
		
		
	
		
				
		
		 
	 | 
	 
 
			Royalville Communications, Inc  produces:
  
				
			 |   
	   
     | 	
     	
 
	
		
		Tell a Friend 
		
			
				Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
			
		 
		
			
				Please complete all fields marked *.
			
		 		
		
	 
	
		Sending Mail 		
		 
	 
	
		Sending Successful 		
		 
	 
 
 | 
	
		
	 |