The
portrait shows the first commander of the Civilian Unit of Gorizia (the then
Municipal Police), Ivan Milost, popularly called “Zuan delle Rose” (John with a
Rose). He wore a rose in a buttonhole throughout the seasons of the year; in
addition to his fashionable clothes the rose denoted his privileged social
position. The clothes are made even more precious by the anchor-shaped brooch
with a showy bright diamond, which in turn invokes the earring. The sitter’s
hairstyle is exquisitely elegant, with bushy sideburns, and his amiable smile
contributes to express his good-naturedness and satisfaction with his own
comfortable life. The painting was exhibited in Ljubljana in 1967, when it was
still in a private collection. In 1995, the Italian state purchased it with the
purpose to be given to the Galleria nazionale d’arte antica in Trieste. The
portrait was most likely painted in the second half of the 1820s and is one of
the first works in Tominc’s mature oeuvre. After the end of the exhibition in
the National Gallery of Slovenia, the painting will be on display in the
Galerie Belvedere in Vienna, included in the "Biedermaier extended"
exhibition, from October 21, 2016, through February 12, 2017.
As to the
present knowledge, the two sitters are spouse Carlo Sandrini and Matilde
Hoffmann of Trieste. The portraits were perhaps commissioned on the occasion of
the wedding of the couple, which should have occurred around the year 1840;
namely, the woman wears a wedding ring on her left hand. Both sitters’ costume
and hairstyle represent fashion trends of that period, and the arm of Matilde
Hoffmann is embellished with two interesting bracelets. One is of Bohemian
origin, in the shape of a snake and adorned with garnets. Such jewellery was
extremely widespread in our places at that time, whereas the motif of a snake
came into fashion exactly in the 1840s. The other bracelet is made of quartz of
varied colours, with a heart-shaped pendant which likewise points to the time
around the mid-19th century. The lady wears a necklace which is
probably made of human hair, and of the same material is also the chain of
Carlo Sandrini’s pocket watch. Hair jewellery was very popular in the 18thand 19th centuries and such items also had a sentimental value,
since they were worn in remembrance of the loved ones. Pairs of portraits were
usually meant to be mounted side by side on the same wall, therefore the
figures are slightly turned one towards the other, with the man on the left and
the woman on the right. Both sitters are portrayed in a fairly relaxed
attitude, with a lively expression of the faces. The compositions are reduced
to the essential elements. The backgrounds are neutral, which is typical of
numerous portraits of individuals by Tominc dating from the 1830s and 1840s.
Also the painting quality allows to place the two portraits in the period of
maximum production of Jožef Tominc, at the time of his stay in Trieste. The
whereabouts of the canvases was in Gorizia (Italy) and they have always been in
private possession until now. The Regional museum Goriški muzej Kromberk, Nova
Gorica, purchased them this year when we are celebrating the 150thanniversary of the painter’s death. They were first presented to the public on
Tuesday, September 13, 2016, in Kromberk Castle, where they will be part of the
permanent collection of ancient and modern art.
The
paintings will be presented by Katarina
Brešan, curator in the Regional museum Goriški muzej Kromberk, Nova
Gorica, and Dr. Luca Caburlotto,
director of the Polo museale del Friuli Venezia Giulia.
The exhibition was prepared in cooperation with
National Gallery of Slovenia
Nova Gorica, Regional museum
Kromberk
Trieste, National Gallery of
Ancient Art
Ministero dei beni e
delle attività culturali e del turismo
29 September–16 October 2016
National Gallery of Slovenia
Prešernova 24
1000 Ljubljana
Slovenia