Antonio Pisanello, Three
Men Standing, a drawing
Italy, around AD 1440s
Illustrating fifteenth-century courtly
dress
An inscription on the drawing, probably
contemporary and perhaps by the artist himself, records the drawing
as being by PISANUS. The artist, Pisanello (about 1395-1455)
(meaning 'little Pisan') derives his name from his
father's birthplace, Pisa in Tuscany. He spent most of his
career in the princely courts of Italy where he painted portraits
and frescoes of the rulers and courtiers and, most importantly,
designed and made medals for the various
rulers.
The drawing is made
in pen and ink with a grey wash over a black chalk sketch, on
parchment. Parchment is fine sheep or goat skin, more expensive
than paper, but an appropriate medium for drawings because it can
survive handling better than paper. Vellum's hard-wearing
nature made it ideal for study, or model books of designs kept in
the studio, and for elaborately finished studies such as this,
which may have been made as
gifts.
These three men are
shown standing, dressed in elaborate courtly costumes, like three
male models in a fashion show. The figure at the left wears a long
thin hat, his robes are trimmed with fur. In the centre, wearing an
elaborate and large cloth turban, an older man wears fur-trimmed
robes though of a different design. To the right, another young man
is seen in profile, a wreath of flowers in his hair, wearing a robe
with billowing sleeves with patterns like
feathers.
A.E. Popham and P. Pouncey, Italian drawings in the Depa-5 (London, The British Museum Press, 1950)
F. Ames-Lewis, Drawing in early Renaissance I (New Haven and London, Yale University Press, 1981)