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Therefore, this portrait is to be added to the small group of only three cardinals known to date with the subject standing (while few other cardinals are known), always in emperor format, but with the prelate sitting on a ceremonial chair. These are the portraits of Flavio Chigi (Ariccia, Palazzo Chigi), Carlo Cerri (London, National Gallery) and Decio Azzolino (Berlin, Staatliche Museum).
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In short, all portrayed with museums in mind, and dating back to the 1670s, like this one. Which takes us to the far-from-easy identification of the sitter, certainly to be identified among the group of cardinals present in Rome between the pontificate of Pope Clement IX (1667-69) and that of Innocent XI (1676-89), but before the painter's definitive departure from Rome in 1682.
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This engraving was probably taken from a previous pose, dating back to the time of his nomination in 1669, while portrait under discussion would be from no more than a few years later, showing the prelate looking more mature. Presumably, it was painted in 1673, on the occasion of the appointment of Bonaccorsi as Papal Legate in Bologna by Clement X, given the official clothing he is wearing.
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Bonaccorso Bonaccorsi was born in Monte Santo, Archdiocese of Fermo, on July 23rd, 1620, into a family from The Marches, originally from Monte Santo (now Potenza Picena), conceivably a branch of the Buonacorsi family of Florence, distinguished in the 15th century among the noble families of Macerata. Counts of Castel San Pietro, they were nobles of Bologna and were welcomed into the Roman aristocracy by Pope Benedict XIV. The family produced two cardinals, Buonaccorso, and in the 1700s, Simone.
Having graduated in law from the University of Perugia, Bonaccorsi embarked upon a rapid and successful ecclesiastical career, with appointments as a Referendary of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura, a Prefect of Arms and Provisions for Pope Alexander VII, a butler to Cardinal Flavio Chigi, and Treasurer of the Apostolic Camera.
He was elected Cardinal Deacon via a special dispensation, not having received the minor orders, by Clement IX on November 29th, 1669, and was definitively appointed cardinal and assigned the titular church of Santa Maria della Scala by Clement X on March 27th, 1670. On April 17th, 1673, he was appointed by the same Pope as the Pontifical Legate in Bologna, the city where he was to pass away on April 18th, 1678, at the age of 57.
He is buried in the Basilica della Santa Casa in Loreto, in a funeral monument designed by Antonio Raggi, who also sculpted the praying portrait of him inserted in the niche.
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Jacob Ferdinand Voet, known as "monsù Ferdinando" or "Ferdinando de' ritratti" (Antwerp 1639 - Paris 1689), was the fashionable portrait painter par excellence of late-Baroque Rome, between the pontificate of Rospigliosi (1667-1669) and the beginning of the pontificate of Odescalchi (1676-1685). He later established himself as a leading specialist in Europe of the Grand Siècle thanks to his international production.
The painter's fame was furthered by the creation of the "Gallerie delle Belle", that is, collections of the faces of the most fascinating women of Roman: from the series born for the Chigi family in 1672 and inspired by the Mancini sisters, to those produced (also by replicating, assimilating or altering the originals) for the Colonna, Savoy, Massimo, and other illustrious Italian families.
Between 1682 and 1684, he settled in Piedmont where he worked for the Savoy family and aristocracy. He lived the last part of his life in France, executing numerous portraits of personages of the Court.
He became "painter to his most Christian Majesty", however his rising career was cut short by his sudden death in Paris on September 26th, 1689, in his home on Quai de Guénégaud near the Pont Neuf.