Artwork
Female Portrait

Female Portrait is an oil painting by the Northern Renaissance artist Lucas Cranach the Elder. It dates from 1530 and is held in the collection of the Uffizi Gallery.
About this work
Overview
This oil painting, created around 1530 by Lucas Cranach the Elder's workshop based on his design, is a portrait of a woman. Now part of the Uffizi Gallery's collection in Florence, Italy, it exemplifies the German Renaissance style.
Subject & Meaning
The subject, a woman, is portrayed in three-quarters view against a dark background, drawing focus to her face. Her serious expression and direct gaze characterize the depiction. Adorned in a fashionable red headpiece with white feathers and a black dress with a brown corset, she reflects contemporary attire often seen in Cranach's and other German artists' works of the time.
Technique & Style
Executed in oil paint, the work showcases intricate details, typical of Cranach's workshop. The composition's emphasis on the subject's face and the use of a dark background to highlight her are hallmarks of the German Renaissance portrait style.
History & Provenance
Originating from Lucas Cranach the Elder's workshop, based on his preliminary drawing, the painting's early history is not detailed here. It is currently housed in the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, Italy.
Context
The painting reflects the early 16th-century German fashion and artistic trends, with the subject's attire (especially the plumed hat) appearing in variants across works by Cranach and his contemporaries.
Legacy
As a work from Cranach's workshop, it contributes to the understanding of his style's dissemination and the broader German Renaissance portrait tradition, though its individual impact is not specifically highlighted in available information.
Artist & collection
Artist
Lucas Cranach the Elder was a German Renaissance painter and printmaker in woodcut and engraving.



















