Details
?WORKSHOP OF TIZIANO VECELLO, CALLED TITIAN (PIEVE DI CADORE, C. 1485/1490-1576 VENICE)
Madonna and Child with Saint Mary Magdalene
with artist's monogram 'T.F.' (upper right)
oil on canvas
3938 x 3178 in. (99.9 x 80.9 cm.)
Provenance
(Possibly) Borghese collection, Palazzo Borghese, Rome.
James Irvine (1759-1831), Rome, by 24 August 1827, from whom acquired in August 1827 by,
Sir William Forbes, 7th Baronet of Pistligo (1773-1828), Fettercairn House, Grampian, Scotland, and by descent to his son,
Sir John Stuart Hepburn Forbes, 8th Baronet of Pistligo (1804-1866); his sale, Rainy, London, 2 June 1842, lot 17, as 'Titian', where it went unsold, and by descent to his daughter,
Henrietta Williamina Hepburn Forbes (1835-1869), Fettercairn House, Grampian, Scotland, and by inheritance to her husband,
Charles John Robert Hepburn-Stuart-Forbes-Treffusis, 20th Baron Clinton (1834-1904), Fettercairn House, Grampian, Scotland, and by descent to his son,
Charles Hepburn-Stuart-Forbes-Treffusis, 21st Baron Clinton (1863-1957), and by descent in the family to the following,
Two Great Scottish Collections, Property from the Forbeses of Pistligo and the Marquess of Lothian; Sotheby’s, London, 28 March 2017, lot 29, as 'Follower of Titian', where acquired by the present owner.
Literature
(Possibly) J. Barry, The Works of James Barry… Observations on different works of art in France and Italy by Mr. Barry during his residence in those countries, London, 1809, pp. 6 and 44-45.
(Possibly) Sir R. Colt Hoare, Bt, Recollections abroad during the years 1785, 1786, 1787, Bath, 1815, p. 79.
Letter from James Irvine to Sir William Forbes, sent from Bologna on 24 August 1827, The Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles, unpublished manuscript.
Letter from Charles Irvine to his uncle James Irvine, dated 11 March 1828, confirming that Sir William Forbes viewed 'in Aug, last' and paid Guineas 150 for the present picture, The Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles, unpublished manuscript.
Letter from James Irvine to Sir William Forbes, sent on 5 November 1828, The Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles, unpublished manuscript.
Fettercairn House, Inventory, 1917, when listed in the drawing room.
Fettercairn House, Inventory, 1930, when listed in the drawing room.
A. Graves, Arts Sales from early in the eighteenth century to early in the twentieth century, New York, 1970, III, p. 212.
M. Jaffé, 'Pesaro Family Portraits: Pordenone, Lotto and Titian', The Burlington Magazine, CXIII, no. 825, December 1971, p. 702, note 35.

Special notice
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Lot Essay

This canvas, formerly at Fettercairn House, relates to the composition by Titian best known through the picture at the Hermitage, which was acquired from the Barbarigo Gallery in Venice in the mid-nineteenth century. The operation of Titian’s studio has been the focus of great scholarly interest in recent decades, with new information coming to light on the shifting organisation of his bottega and the nature of the collaboration with his assistants, and this picture adds to our growing understanding of the artist’s workshop practices. The question of how replicas and studio versions were made is a particularly intriguing one: it is known that from 1540 onwards Titian kept a large number of pictures in the studio, the purpose of which may have been to keep records of compositions so as to later produce replicas on demand. Titian’s tendency to experiment with and revise compositions, even at a distance of many years, has been well documented, and there appear to be two variants of this particular Madonna and Child with Saint Mary Magdalene. The clearest difference is in the manner in which the Magdalen’s hair is dressed: in the Hermitage picture, it falls down loosely over her shoulders, whereas in the present picture, it is tied up. Another studio version of the latter is in the Galleria deli Uffizi, Florence, which, like the Hermitage picture, dates to later in Titian’s career. The handling of the present canvas however appears to relate more closely to his earlier manner.

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