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1550 painting by Titian
The Fall of Man is a painting of the
Fall of Man or story of
Adam and Eve by the Venetian artist
Titian, dating to around 1550 and now in the
Prado in Madrid. It is influenced by
Raphael's fresco of the same subject in the
Stanza della Signatura in the Vatican, which also had a seated Adam and standing Eve, as well as
Albrecht Dürer's engraving
Adam and Eve for smaller details. Owned at one point by
Philip II of Spain's secretary,
Antonio Pérez, and perhaps first commissioned by his father, in 1585 it entered the
Spanish royal collection, where it was copied by
Rubens between 1628 and 1629 for
his own version of the subject.
See also
References
-
Prado online page, version of Falomir, M.: Tiziano, Museo Nacional del Prado, 2003, pp. 396-397
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- [1] On display at El Greco Museum in Toledo
- [2] On display at Museo de América in Madrid
- [3] On display at the Spanish Embassy in Paris
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