
by Giovanni Battista Moroni, 1570
Giovanni Battista Moroni painted this cloth merchant around 1570, capturing him mid-work with scissors ready to cut black fabric marked with chalk lines. He wears cream and red clothing of a successful professional, plus a sword belt denoting high status. He looks up at us, interrupted.
The portrait's snapshot quality gives it startling vitality. Moroni painted directly from life without preliminary drawings. He was among the first to portray the wealthy bourgeoisie rather than just nobility. The National Gallery considers this his most celebrated work. Acquired in 1862, it hangs at the National Gallery in London.

Francesco Guardi
National Gallery, London

Claude Monet
National Gallery, London

Rembrandt van Rijn
National Gallery, London

Raphael
National Gallery, London
Other masterpieces from the Renaissance movement

Raphael, 1512
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Sandro Botticelli, 1485
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Raphael, 1510
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Raphael, 1511
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Titian, 1538
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Titian, 1555
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.

El Greco, 1614
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Sandro Botticelli, 1482
Uffizi Gallery, Florence, Florence
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