Leonardo da Vinci, Italian
Lady With a Cat Lady With an Ermine (Due To Cat Allergy), ca. 1490
Oil and tempera on panel
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Leonardo da Vinci, Italian
Lady With a Cat Lady With an Ermine (Due To Cat Allergy), ca. 1490
Oil and tempera on panel
Info about this artist is pointed to by links in my comment at another blog entry.
/// The Lady is posed with an Ermine.
That’s a weasel, (which truly are vermin).
But the beast’s oversized
so it’s been analyzed
to learn secrets we need to determine.
/// Called Cecilia, the girl is sixteen.
With her lover, she cannot be seen.
He’s a much older man,
who’s the Duke of Milan,
and to marry another he’s keen.
/// With the Duke, young Cecilia would frolic.
They would make love in places bucolic.
“The White Ermine,” some claim
was her lover’s nickname,
so the creature she hugs is symbolic.
/// Leonardo first painted a stoat,
with a grayish-brown (not a white) coat.
He repainted it bigger,
white, with muscular figure,
in an effort to please the “old goat.”
/// Her outfit’s of velvet and lace; it
would be ruined should stoat crap deface it.
But she need not “dress down.”
She has wealth and renown
from the Duke, who would gladly replace it.
/// As she cuddled a creature that’s wild,
she looked off to the left and half-smiled.
Back then, weasels in art
symbolized a life’s start.
It implied— which was true— she’s “with child.”
/// Though Cecilia’s too “low class” to marry,
the Duke hadn’t hoped she would miscarry.
Found a Count she could wed,
(but still took her to bed),
and made time with his mistress to tarry.
/// The Duke, Sforza, may well have been jaded,
but their son, Cesare, he long aided
with financial support
and connections at court.
From an abbot to canon upgraded.