Portrait of Pope Paul V (c. 1605-1606) is a painting by the
Italian artist Michelangelo Merisi da
Caravaggio (1571–1610), now in the
Galleria Borghese,
Rome.
Camillo Borghese reigned as
Pope Paul V from 1605 to 1621. Caravaggio's biographer
Giovanni Bellori records that the artist painted a seated portrait of him as pope, which must place the work between Borghese's election on 16 May 1605 and Caravaggio's flight from Rome in May 1606 following the death of Ranuccio Tommassoni. The portrait is attested in the Borghese collection from 1650.
Many scholars have doubted the authenticity of this painting, considering the composition too uninspired for the artist's style. But the scholar John Gash in his authoritative (revised) 2003 catalogue of Caravaggio believes the work is genuine, pointing out that the pose would have been beyond the artist's control - Paul V was noted for his dignified and even taciturn demenour, and would be unlikely to accept direction. "is unostentatious bearing exemplifies the sober, cautious and, in fact, genuinely religious spirit of the man...". Gash also points out that Paul's narrowed eyes, far from conveying suspicion and malevolence as many writers assert, are the result of chronic myopia. Also note the startling similarities between this portrait and
Velázquez's
Portrait of Pope Innocent X.
According to Bellori Caravaggio obtained his introduction to Paul through the papal nephew, cardinal
Scipione Borghese. Scipione was an avid...
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