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Jewelry in Renaissant Art
by Johnny S. Thompson | Published  22/07/2005 | References
Rings in Renaissant Art


Figure 1. Portrait of a Jeweller (1516) by Franciabigio (1484-1525)


Figure 2. Portrait of a Jeweller (detail) (1516).

There are two very interesting things one must notice about rings illustrated in Italian Renaissant art, which differ very much from the styles of today’s conventions. Firstly, whereas ring designs are now, usually, made as elaborate as possible with, often, less importance placed on the purity of the compositions themselves, women and men, from around the 14th to the 17th century saw the matter strictly the other way around.

Franciabigio (1484-1525) created Portrait of a Jeweller (1516) (Fig. 1) of a man who is supposed by most experts to be Michelangelo di Viviano (1455-1526.) Michelangelo di Viviano was the household jeweler to the Medici family, a family that held religious, cultural, and political power from the 13th to the 17th century in Italy. Viviano was the most celebrated Florentine goldsmith because of his skill at setting gemstones and creating precious objects for the Medici. The painting portrays him testing one of several gold rings that he displays on a black touchstone, a pietra di paragone (Fig. 2.) The color of the streaks that are left on the touchstone would indicate the purity of the gold. There is a steep hill on the left background of the painting, with a narrow path winding up. The sitter’s diagonal placement of the shoulders makes a direct compositional link with the path, and it is thought that this “may thus be an allusion to the tangible rewards he had obtained through his skill as a setter of jewels and maker of precious objects for the ruling Medici family” (Waldman, 2005, 165.) Each ring he displays, however, is surprisingly simple, with one small gem set in a thin gold band. It is very rare that one sees a jeweler, part of the working class, sitting for a picture by a great master, whether it were commissioned by the Medici family or by the sitter himself. This shows that Viviano must have indeed been very famous at his work and, being considered one of the greatest setters of gemstones, it is evident that little importance was placed on the design of the gemstones or ring itself, but more necessary was the purity of the gold and the stone.

However, where citizens of Renaissant Italy may have not cared much for fancy design of their rings, they certainly were not satisfied with a limited amount of them. Though wedding rings were worn by both the man and the woman, they were often worn on the wrong fingers, and, in actuality, it did not matter to anyone, not only which finger held which ring, but even what part of the finger held it. This may be hard to believe, but is inevitably accepted when one examines Raphael’s La Fornarina (1520) (Fig. 3) and Portraits of Agnolo and Maddalena Doni (1505-1506) (Fig. 4.) (On the upper left corner of Figure 3, the myrtle and quince bushes are highlighted.)


Figure 3. La Fornarina (1520) by Raphael (1483-1520).


Figure 4. Portraits of Agnolo and Maddalena Doni (1505-1506) by Raphael (1483-1520).

 


Figure 5. Ring. La Fornarina (detail) (1520) by Raphael.

The women in each picture wear without discomfort a ring on the second phalange. One may speculate that there are two separate reasons for this. For La Fornarina, if one cannot help but believe the romantic rumors surrounding the relationship between Raphael (1483-1520) and the baker’s daughter he painted, perhaps he had painted her ring so faintly and so close to the edge of the painting (Fig. 5) because he knew that this affair would cause a great scandal. As he was publicly engaged to Cardinal Bibbiena’s niece Maria Bibbiena, who died before their wedding, Raphael’s school hastily covered up the ring and the quince and myrtle bushes in the background of the painting (representing fidelity and fertility) in order to get a commission from the Vatican over Michelangelo. From this, one may guess that, unless wearing a ring on the second phalange was not as awkward as it seems it would be, Raphael may have painted it this way to make it easy to cover up.

With regard to the portrait of Maddalena Doni, in accordance with her obvious obsession with jewelry, one might suppose she was contented with placing her rings wherever she could (Fig. 6.) In fact, women of the time wore as many rings as possible, the placement irrelevant, and, in consequence of this fixation, a law in Florence had to passed in 1415, stating that "a woman cannot wear on one or more fingers more than a total of 3 rings. And across all the rings and fingers she may not have more than one pearl or another precious stone. These restrictions apply to both hands" (Herald, 1981, 173).


Figure 6. Hands with the rings. Portraits of Agnolo and Maddalena Doni (1505-1506). (Detail)
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