Portrait of an Old Man

Description

This moving portrait of an old man was made in northern Italy probably in the last decade of the 1400s and is the oldest drawing in the Gray collection. The man’s highly realistic unshaven chin, wrinkled flesh, sunken cheeks and eyes, and thinning hair exemplify the Renaissance desire to be truthful to nature.

About this drawing, collector Richard Gray once observed, “Everything about it is masterful—the way it depicts a unique individual in the fullness of his individuality, it’s not a type. It has presence.”

Provenance

Private collection, Europe. Sold by Salamander Fine Arts, London, to Richard and Mary L. Gray, Chicago, July 13, 2005; given to the Art Institute of Chicago, 2019.

Portrait of an Old Man

Francesco Bonsignori

late fifteenth century

Accession Number

202142

Medium

Charcoal, with wet brush and stumping, on tan laid paper prepared with a gray ground

Dimensions

27.5 × 21.9 cm (10 7/8 × 8 5/8 in.)

Classification

drawings (visual works)

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Gift of Richard and Mary L. Gray