In Madrid, the Prado Museum has decided to commemorate the lesser-known activity as part of its permanent collection
The art world was built around the practice of copying, even if this tradition is now being lost. In Madrid, the Prado Museum has decided to commemorate this lesser-known activity as part of its permanent collection.
The Madrid institution recently unveiled a new permanent exhibition room featuring forgotten treasures from its reserves. These are not original works, but reproductions of paintings from royal collections and ecclesiastical institutions. They bear witness to the talent of Spanish and European copyists from the 15th to the 20th century, such as Manuel RamÃrez Ibanez, Luca Giordano, Pietro Facchetti and Juan Bautista MartÃnez del Mazo.
These copyists were not mere imitators, but artists in their own right. They were able to reproduce to perfection the style of the painters whose work they copied. Manuel RamÃrez Ibanez's copy of Titian's painting, "Sacred and Profane Love," bears witness to this expertise. It is so accurate that it even recreates the amber hue that the painting had taken on at the time due to lack of restoration, according to El PaÃs.
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