Portrait of Cardinal Zelada
Anton Raphael Mengs, 1773
About this artwork
Anton Raphael Mengs' *Portrait of Cardinal Zelada (1773) captures the dignified likeness of Innocenzo Silvio Cardinal Zelada, an influential Italian churchman elevated to the College of Cardinals that same year. Painted in oil on panel—a medium evoking Renaissance traditions while allowing Mengs' signature luminous glazes and precise detailing—this 90 × 66 cm work exemplifies the artist's mastery during his Roman period. Housed in the Art Institute of Chicago's Department of Painting and Sculpture of Europe, it invites visitors to admire its intimate scale and refined execution. Mengs, a Bohemian-born pioneer of Neoclassicism, bridged Rococo elegance with classical revival, drawing inspiration from ancient Greek and Roman art as championed by his contemporary Johann Joachim Winckelmann. In this portrait, his technique emphasizes balanced composition, subtle modeling of flesh tones, and symbolic attire that conveys Zelada's ecclesiastical authority, reflecting Enlightenment ideals of reason and order amid papal politics. This artwork holds cultural significance as a testament to 18th-century portraiture's role in immortalizing power. Mengs' influence extended to courts across Europe, making this piece a window into the era's intellectual and artistic ferment, where portraiture blended flattery with philosophical depth.