ATTRIBUTED TO NICCOLÒ DELL'ABATE (MODENA 1509⁄12 -1571 FONTAINEBLEAU?)
ATTRIBUTED TO NICCOLÒ DELL'ABATE (MODENA 1509⁄12 -1571 FONTAINEBLEAU?)
ATTRIBUTED TO NICCOLÒ DELL'ABATE (MODENA 1509⁄12 -1571 FONTAINEBLEAU?)
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A Lifelong Pursuit: Old Masters from a Distinguished Private Collection
ATTRIBUTED TO NICCOLÒ DELL'ABATE (MODENA 1509⁄12 -1571 FONTAINEBLEAU?)

Portrait of a young man, bust-length, in black with a black feathered cap

Details
ATTRIBUTED TO NICCOLÒ DELL'ABATE (MODENA 1509⁄12 -1571 FONTAINEBLEAU?)
Portrait of a young man, bust-length, in black with a black feathered cap
oil on canvas
16 7⁄8 x 13 in. (42.8 x 32.9 cm.)
Provenance
with Galerie Canesso, Paris, where acquired in 2004 by the present owner.
Literature
S. Béguin, Nicolò dell'Abate: Storie dipinte nella pittura del cinquecento tra Modena a Fontainebleau, exhibition catalogue, Milan and Modena, 2005, p. 352, no. 135, illustrated, as Niccolò dell’Abate.
Exhibited
Modena, Foro Boario, Nicolò dell'Abate: Storie dipinte nella pittura del cinquecento tra Modena e Fontainebleau, 20 March - 19 June 2005, no. 135, as Niccolò dell’Abate.

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Lot Essay

This intimate portrait was included in the major Niccolò dell’Abate exhibition curated by Sylvie Béguin and Francesca Piccinini in 2005. In the accompanying catalogue, Béguin recorded Daniele Benati’s shared opinion that the painting is an autograph work by the Emilian master – an attribution he has since reaffirmed, for which we are grateful (written communication, 8 April 2026).

The young sitter, dressed in black with the crisp collar of his white linen shirt visible and wearing an angled black cap adorned with a feather, faces the viewer directly. Béguin proposes that, given its small scale, the painting may have been a preliminary study for a larger portrait, or perhaps represents the likeness of a relative of the artist. She further notes the similarities with Parmigianino’s Portrait of a Man in the Galleria Borghese, Rome (inv. no. 085; fig. 1), a painting which was conceivably known to dell’Abate, particularly as Elisabetta Fadda believes the Borghese painting to have been executed in Bologna toward the end of Parmigianino’s stay there.

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